One-row keyboard

ABSTRACT

In one aspect, an apparatus for data entry on an electronic device, comprising: a keyboard with only one row of keys used to type letters of an alphabet; and an electronic display device in communication with the keyboard; wherein each key of the one row of keys has a correspondence with a plurality of characters, and wherein the correspondence enables touch-typing consistent with touch-typing on QWERTY or other standard keyboard configurations.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/204,940, filed on Aug. 15, 2005 and entitled “One-Row Keyboard and Approximate Typing,” now U.S. Pat. No. 7,387,457 which claims priority to U.S. provisional patent application no. 60/601,224, filed on Aug. 13, 2004 and entitled “Method and Software for Improved Text Entry.” The entire contents of the two above-referenced applications are incorporated herein by reference.

BACKGROUND

The One-Row Keyboard (ORK) is a solution to the text entry problem for small portable devices such as cellphones and smartphones, PDA:s, portable game consoles, music players, remote controls, etc. The keyboard part of the ORK may be combined with processing units to provide several important capabilities:

-   -   support touch-typing and rapid text entry;     -   easy-to-learn and consistent with standard keyboards;     -   easily extensible to include new words and new contexts;     -   small enough for portability and easy integration with mobile         devices;     -   easy corrections of typos and minor mistakes; and     -   support auto-completion.

In addition, the exact design of the ORK can be modified to address different

-   -   operating and communication environments;     -   physical design constraints and physical implementations;     -   host devices; and     -   power supply.

It is fascinating to reflect on the great impact of the PC on society. The PC is clearly capable of doing a whole lot more than what we use it for. Essentially, for many the PC became a replacement for the typewriter, and it is still largely a word processor. The other initial application that drove PC adoption was the spreadsheet. Then it also became a presentation creation tool. Over time, email was introduced and, even more recently, Web browsing. Web browsing, in turn, is giving rise to online shopping and replacing encyclopedias as our primary information resource. But, overall, there are still very few uses for these powerful machines by the average user.

We are now going through a phase where the capabilities of different types of devices are converging. Devices rely on common protocols and are often connected via the Internet, and the services offered are becoming more portable and accessible wherever we are and whenever we need them. We now have PCs, cellphones, TVs, iPods, PDAs, and camera phones relying on the Internet, complemented by communication networks such as the cellular networks, Bluetooth, and Wi-Fi. Services range from unified messaging and VOIP to entertainment.

With these trends toward greater connectedness and mobility, perhaps the most central problem is how to make text entry possible on small, portable devices. The success of email, SMS, and instant messaging on portable devices and user patterns already established on the PC make an efficient text-entry system a must for broad adoption of smaller, mobile devices.

In this direction, the RIM pagers (the Blackberry devices) are prime examples of a well-designed portable device. It is simply an excellent email machine, and for many this immediate access to email becomes highly addictive. A great deal of the success of this type of device relies on its small keyboard, which allows for two-thumb typing. This typing is quick and easy to learn since it relies on the same basic organization as the regular typewriter/PC keyboard.

For cellphones there is the T9 method by Tegic (U.S. Pat. No. 5,818,437 and other pending patents; T9 text input software Copyright 1999-2002; Tegic Communications, Inc.); cf. [23],[24].

For PDAs, the preferred method for text entry seems to be using a touch screen combined with “graffiti” entered using a stylus or tapping a keyboard with the stylus. Recognition of handwriting is also widely used.

A solution to the text entry problem for small portable devices should ideally address the following capabilities:

-   -   support touch-typing and rapid text entry;     -   easy-to-learn and consistent with standard keyboards;     -   easily extensible to include new words and new contexts;     -   small enough for portability and easy integration with mobile         devices;     -   easy corrections of typos and minor mistakes; and     -   support auto-completion.

These goals are addressed by the invention described herein.

SUMMARY

In one aspect, the invention comprises an apparatus for character entry on an electronic device, comprising: a keyboard with one row of keys; and an electronic display device in communication with the keyboard; wherein one or more keys on the keyboard has a correspondence with a plurality of characters, and wherein the correspondence enables QWERTY-based typing.

In another aspect, the invention comprises an apparatus for character entry on an electronic device, comprising: a keyboard with a plurality of keys; and an electronic display device in communication with the keyboard; wherein one or more keys on the keyboard has a correspondence with a plurality of characters, and wherein, for each of the one or more keys, the plurality of characters comprises: (a) a home row character associated with a particular finger when touch typing; and (b) a non-home-row character associated with the particular finger when touch typing.

In various embodiments: (1) the apparatus is operable to apply natural language processing and approximate typing algorithms to increase accuracy of recognition and display of typed words and other valid character combinations; (2) the apparatus is operable to apply natural language processing and approximate typing algorithms to reduce average typing ambiguity by more than 5% over T9; (3) the apparatus is operable to identify words and other valid character combinations typed by users based on modeling character and symbol combinations as paths on N-ary trees; (4) the apparatus is operable to identify words and other valid character combinations typed by users based on a dictionary modeled as a set of valid paths on an N-ary tree; (5) the apparatus is operable to identify words and other valid character combinations typed by a user based on a signature dictionary; (6) the apparatus is operable to: receive ambiguous keyboard input; disambiguate the input; and provide predictions based on the input; (7) the predictions are based on identifying a maximum likelihood of a word or other valid character combinations intended to be typed; and (8) the maximum likelihood is identified based on calculating one or more products of probabilities, wherein each of the products comprises: a probability of a character combination, given an intended signature; and a probability for a signature being the intended one, given actual input; (9) the apparatus is operable to display a likely valid character combination based on keystrokes entered by a user; (10) the likely valid character combination is identified based at least in part on parts of speech classification; (11) the likely valid character combination is identified based at least in part on context-based disambiguation; (12) the likely valid character combination is identified based at least in part on natural language processing techniques; (13) the likely valid character combination is identified based at least in part on ordering with respect to one or more cost functions; (14) the likely valid character combination is identified based at least in part on auto-completion and auto-correction software; and (15) the keyboard is a virtual keyboard displayed on the display device.

In another aspect, the invention comprises an apparatus for character entry on an electronic device, comprising: a keyboard with a plurality of keys; and an electronic display device in communication with the keyboard; wherein each of one or more keys represents an equivalence class of characters, and wherein characters are assigned to equivalence classes according to touch typing assignments to fingers.

In various embodiments: (1) the apparatus is operable to identify typed words and other valid character combinations based on approximate typing algorithms comprising pattern recognition algorithms; (2) the apparatus is operable to identify typed words and other valid character combinations based on one or more cost functions, similarity measures, probability models, or combinations thereof that measure how well typed character sequences approximate intended character sequences; and (3) at least one cost function is based on an edit distance that provides a coarse model of a user's typing and errors.

In another aspect, the invention comprises a method for disambiguation of human input for text entry, comprising: receiving a plurality of discrete input signals; and dynamically mapping the input signals to output signals; wherein one or more of the input signals represents an equivalence class of characters, and wherein the output signals are determined based on approximate typing algorithms comprising pattern recognition algorithms.

In another aspect, the invention comprises a method for disambiguation of human input for text entry, comprising: receiving a plurality of discrete input signals; and dynamically mapping the input signals to output signals; wherein one or more of the input signals represents an equivalence class of characters, and wherein the output signals are determined based on one or more cost functions, similarity measures, probability models, or combinations thereof that measure how well input character sequences approximate intended character sequences. In one embodiment, at least one cost function is based on an edit distance that provides a coarse model of a user's input process and errors.

In another aspect, the invention comprises a method for disambiguation of human input for text entry, comprising: receiving a plurality of discrete input signals; and dynamically mapping the input signals to output signals; wherein one or more of the input signals represents an equivalence class of characters, wherein the output signals include a likely valid character combination, and wherein the likely valid character combination is identified based at least in part on parts of speech classification.

In another aspect, the invention comprises a method for disambiguation of human input for text entry, comprising: receiving a plurality of discrete input signals; and dynamically mapping the input signals to output signals; wherein one or more of the input signals represents an equivalence class of characters, wherein the output signals include a likely valid character combination, and wherein the likely valid character combination is identified based at least in part on context-based disambiguation.

In another aspect, the invention comprises a method for disambiguation of human input for text entry, comprising: receiving a plurality of discrete input signals; and dynamically mapping the input signals to output signals; wherein one or more of the input signals represents an equivalence class of characters, wherein the output signals include a likely valid character combination, and wherein the likely valid character combination is identified based at least in part on natural language processing techniques.

In another aspect, the invention comprises a method for disambiguation of human input for text entry, comprising: receiving a plurality of discrete input signals; and dynamically mapping the input signals to output signals; wherein one or more of the input signals represents an equivalence class of characters, wherein the output signals include a likely valid character combination, and wherein the likely valid character combination is identified based at least in part on ordering with respect to one or more cost functions.

In another aspect, the invention comprises a method for disambiguation of human input for text entry, comprising: receiving a plurality of discrete input signals; and dynamically mapping the input signals to output signals; wherein one or more of the input signals represents an equivalence class of characters, wherein the output signals include a likely valid character combination, and wherein the likely valid character combination is identified based at least in part on auto-completion and auto-correction software.

A solution to the text entry problem for small portable devices should ideally address the following capabilities:

-   -   support touch-typing and rapid text entry;     -   easy-to-learn and consistent with standard keyboards;     -   easily extensible to include new words and new contexts;     -   small enough for portability and easy integration with mobile         devices;     -   easy corrections of typos and minor mistakes; and     -   support auto-completion.

The One-Row Keyboard (ORK) is a solution to this problem. Here are some of the key components of this solution, how each contributes to the solution, and how these are different than the commonly used T9.

-   -   1. The ORK uses a mapping of the standard QWERTY keyboard onto a         small set of keys in such a way that the user's previous         experience and training with the QWERTY keyboard can be re-used.         In particular, this mapping allows for rapid touch-typing of         regular text (including both letters and punctuation marks),         using all fingers, with virtually no additional training.         Difference from T9: T9 requires a slow entry process that is not         consistent with the QWERTY keyboard. In particular, the T9 input         process is hard to learn, the typing speed is slow, a careful         aim must be used for the few fingers utilized, and touch-typing         is not supported. Hence, the input process requires considerable         attention.     -   2. Both ORK and T9 use a smaller set of keys than the regular         QWERTY keyboard. Hence, a certain set of keystrokes on either         one may not have a unique interpretation in terms of regular         letters or words. In such cases, the user may have to choose         among alternatives, which requires attention and interrupts         typing flow. The ORK is optimized to reduce this ambiguity in         several ways:         -   (a) Without extra optimization, the ORK creates about 2-3             times less ambiguity than T9.         -   (b) The ORK integrates the punctuation marks into the             predictive typing.         -   (c) Using Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques, the             ambiguity, and hence user attention, is reduced further.             (These techniques can also be used to improve T9's             performance.)         -   (d) As data is input, changes occur on the screen. If such             changes are not consistent with user expectation, this may             cause user distraction. The ORK uses algorithms to smooth             the changes on the screen.         -   (e) The ORK uses a Beginning Of Word (BOW) organization of             the dictionary to display the character combinations that             will result in little change on the screen. Difference from             T9: T9 uses a linked tree structure. (These techniques can             also be used to improve T9's performance.)         -   (f) The ORK also uses cost functions for the display process             that increase the cost for changes on the screen. Hence, by             minimizing these cost functions, a smoother display results.             (These techniques can also be used to improve T9's             performance.)         -   (g) Another reason for interruption of the user's typing             flow is the occasional need to add new entries to the             dictionary. T9 uses a “spell mode” for this: when a             character combination is not recognized, the user is asked             to start from the beginning and enter the word unambiguously             using multi-tap. This is quite frustrating for the user and             is a serious interruption in the entry process. ORK uses a             simplified spell mode. This simplification re-uses the             information the user has already entered and, hence, only a             small amount of extra information is necessary to uniquely             identify the new word. The interface for the input of this             extra information also requires much less attention on             behalf of the user. (These techniques can also be used to             improve T9's performance.)         -   (h) Another significant cause of user interruption is typing             errors and other incorrect entries. Because of the ambiguity             created by reduced keyboards, such errors are harder to fix.             The ORK allows the user to use “approximate typing.” The             reduced keyboard entry process is integrated with a             correction process, which can either be automatic or             designed to minimize user intervention. The correction             process is based on statistical techniques used by NLP,             voice recognition and speech processing, as well as machine             translation. (These techniques can also be used to improve             T9's performance.)     -   3. The ORK uses both the NLP and approximate typing techniques         to improve the auto-completion capability. This allows the user         to enter only part of a word or character combination, and when         a reasonable prediction of the remaining characters have been         obtained, these characters are entered or presented to the user         for possible acceptance. (These techniques can also be used to         improve T9's performance.)     -   4. The ORK also reduces the need for user attention and supports         the uninterrupted typing process by allowing a combination of         ambiguous and non-ambiguous typing. This allows the entry of         symbols and numbers to be integrated with prediction based on         the entered letters and punctuation marks.

In one aspect, the present invention comprises an apparatus for data entry on an electronic device, comprising: a keyboard with only one row of keys used to type letters of an alphabet; and an electronic display device in communication with the keyboard; wherein each key of the one row of keys has a correspondence with a plurality of characters, and wherein the correspondence enables touch-typing consistent with touch-typing on QWERTY or other standard keyboard configurations.

In various embodiments: (a) the correspondence is based on a mapping of characters associated with a specified finger or thumb in standard keyboard typing to a specified key in the one row of keys; (b) the apparatus further comprises a disambiguation unit; (c) the communication is via Bluetooth; (d) the correspondence is based on a mapping of characters associated with a specified thumb in standard two-thumb keyboard typing to a specified key in the one row of keys; (e) the communication is wireless; (f) the keyboard is two-sided, with keys on both sides; (g) the keyboard comprises at least two components attached to a hinge; (h) the apparatus further comprises a main unit comprising a central processing unit (CPU); (i) the keyboard is a projected keyboard and/or a virtual keyboard; (j) the keyboard is detachable from the main unit; (k) the keyboard is integrated with the main unit; (l) the keyboard is operable to slide into an opening in the main unit; (m) the keyboard comprises two or more components, each of which is rotatable into an opening in the main unit; (n) the display device is rotatably attached to the main unit; (o) the display device is operable to display output from the disambiguation unit; (p) the apparatus is operable to provide audio feedback to a user of the keyboard; and/or (q) the apparatus is configured for use as a remote control device.

In another aspect, the invention comprises an apparatus for data entry on an electronic device, comprising: an electronic display device comprising an electronic display; and one or more keys adjacent to the display; wherein the electronic display is operable to display a grid with one or more vertical lines and one or more horizontal lines, wherein each of the one or more vertical lines has a corresponding key comprised in the one or more keys and each of the one or more horizontal lines has a corresponding key comprised in the one or more keys, and wherein the display device is operable to select a region or image on the electronic display corresponding to at least one of the vertical lines and at least one of the horizontal lines when a user presses keys corresponding to the at least one of the vertical lines and at least one of the horizontal lines.

In another aspect, the invention comprises a portable compact keyboard comprising: a base including a first base portion and a second base portion hingedly attached to the first portion for pivotal movement, each portion having a top and a bottom, the base moveable from a closed position to an open position; a first row of alphabetic keys supported by the top of the first base portion, the keys including alphabetic indicia corresponding to a first set of characters of an alphabet of a written language, wherein only the first row of keys of the first base portion contains the alphabetic indicia, at least one key containing more than one alphabetic indicia; a first row of alphabetic keys supported by the bottom of the second base portion, the keys including alphabetic indicia corresponding to a second set of characters of an alphabet of a written language, the second set of characters being different than the first set, wherein only the first row of keys of the second base portion contains the alphabetic indicia, at least one key containing more than one alphabetic indicia; wherein the keys of the first base portion face upwards towards the keys of the second base portion which face downwards when the base is in the closed position.

In various embodiments: (a) the keys of the first base portion are positioned adjacent to the keys of the second base portion when the base is in the open position, the keys of the first base portion and the second base portion all facing upwards; (b) the keys of the first base portion are axially aligned along a longitudinal axis with the keys of the second base portion; (c) the keyboard further comprises a plurality of keys disposed on the top of the second base portion; and/or (d) the keyboard further comprises control logic operable to associate the alphabetic keys with the characters of the alphabet.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1: Depicts an embodiment of the ORK.

FIG. 2: The two-dimensional grid representation of words and valid character combinations.

FIG. 3: Communication system for character input/output.

FIG. 4: The states based on the current and previous character, and some representative state transitions.

FIG. 5: One possible set of states and operators to generate σ^(a)=5512334 from σ^(v)=1234.

FIG. 6: One possible set of states and operators to generate σ^(a)=1243 from σ^(v)=12234.

FIG. 7: Building exhaustive tag context information.

FIG. 8: Trellis for one disambiguation group with N number of words.

FIG. 9: Disambiguation using tag context information.

FIG. 10: Training using tag context information to generate a sparse trellis for compact tag-based disambiguation.

FIG. 11: Building exhaustive tag context information.

FIG. 12: Tag record for one disambiguation group with N number of words.

FIG. 13: Disambiguation using previous tag information.

FIG. 14: Training using previous tag information to generate a sparse record for compact tag-based disambiguation.

FIGS. 15-30: FIGS. 15-30 depict various embodiments of the ORK and its integration with portable devices.

FIG. 31: Depicts an embodiment of the ORK including a set of control keys.

FIG. 32: A typical QWERTY-type keyboard; upper and lower case depicted separately.

FIGS. 33-37: Depict various embodiments of the ORK and its integration with portable devices.

FIGS. 38-40: Depict an embodiment of device with the two-thumb ORK using different on-screen dynamic labels.

FIGS. 41-42: Depict an embodiment of the two-thumb ORK and the use of keys for navigation.

FIG. 43: Depicts an embodiment of the regular ORK combined with the two-thumb ORK.

FIG. 44: Depicts an embodiment of the two-thumb ORK with a deformed arrangement of basic keys.

FIG. 45: Flowchart for an input/output system not relying on visual feedback.

FIG. 46: Depicts an embodiment of device integrated with both the regular ORK as well as a two-thumb version.

FIG. 47: Depicts an embodiment of a two-thumb ORK.

FIGS. 48-50: Depict various embodiments of a combined regular ORK and two-thumb ORK.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 1 A Preferred Embodiment of the Present Invention Comprises the One-Row Keyboard

1.1 The Basic Set-Up

A regular “QWERTY” keyboard consists of the letters of the alphabet in lower case and then an additional set of characters and control keys. To be specific, we shall assume that the “regular” keyboard for touch-typing consists of 30 symbols arranged in three rows:

Row 1 qwert yuiop Row 2 asdfg hjkl; Row 3 zxcvb nm,./ It will be convenient to assign a specific number α, 1≦α≦30, to each of the letters and symbols of this regular keyboard. Starting with the upper left and going row-wise, the letters on the first row obtain numbers α with 1≦α≦10, and so on. For example, the letter v is assigned the number α=α(v)=24. We also assign the space character (used when we reach the end of a word, for instance) the number α=0.

For the One-Row Keyboard (ORK), we collapse these symbols into one row by grouping three symbols, one from each row, into a single group; see FIG. 1 and FIGS. 15-30. Each one of these groups then corresponds to one key on the One-Row Keyboard: the first key on the One-Row Keyboard corresponds to {qaz}, the second to {wsx}, etc. The One-Row Keyboard thus has ten keys:

-   One-row, left: {qaz}, {wsx}, {edc}, {rfv}, {tgb} -   One-row, right: {yhn}, {ujm}, {ik,}, {ol.}, {p;/}     Just as in the case of the regular keyboard, various additional     keys, extra symbols, and commands may be added to the One-Row     Keyboard. Perhaps the most notable of these is the space bar.

The One-Row Keyboard still allows the user to touch-type: for each letter of a specific word, the key corresponding to the group of letters containing the letter is typed. In this way, the signature corresponding to the word is typed, rather than the word.

Suppose we identify each of the keys of the basic One-Row Keyboard with a number σ, 1≦σ≦10, starting from left and going to the right. So, for example, each of the three letters r, f and v corresponds to the number σ=σ(r)=σ(f)=σ(v)=4. As for regular keys, we also add the space character as σ=0. Now, with this convention, the signature of a word with N letters becomes a sequence of non-zero numbers σ₁σ₂ . . . σ_(N).

Similarly, suppose we identify the row of the regular keyboard to which a letter belongs by a number τ, 1≦τ≦3, starting with the top row. For example, since the letter i belongs to the top row of the regular keyboard, it has τ=τ(i)=1. The dual signature of a word is the sequence of these τ's, one for each letter. A word with N letters thus has a dual signature which is a sequence of numbers τ₁τ₂ . . . τ_(N). Again, it is convenient to have τ=0 correspond to the “space” symbol.

Each specific letter can thus be specified exactly either through the number α or through the pair σ, τ. More generally, an N-letter word w is specified exactly through the sequence α=α(w)=α₁α₂ . . . α_(N),  (1) or, alternatively, through the signature σ=σ(w)=σ₁σ₂ . . . σ_(N)  (2) and the dual signature τ=τ(w)=τ₁τ₂ . . . τ_(N).  (3) As we use the One-Row Keyboard to type in the sequence of a word, we lose (exactly) the information in the word's dual signature.

There is another type of representation of the sequences α, σ, and τ that is also useful. Let us assume that we have a 31-ary infinite tree A=A₃₀, starting from the root and with each node having 31 children. As above, each given word w can be identified with a sequence α=α(w), and now we can identify a in turn with α path α₁α₂ . . . α_(N) in this tree: starting from the root, the value of α₁ means that on the first level (below the root) the node corresponding to the value α₁ is traversed, and then on the next level, level 2, the node corresponding to the value α₂ is traversed, etc. The path of a N letter word thus has N+1 levels if we count the root level. (Whenever convenient, we may also add a space symbol, or several, to the end of the sequence; in that case, the path involves additional levels.)

Similarly, the signature σ=σ(w) of word w with N letters can be identified with a path of length N+1 in a 11-ary tree, with 11 choices on each level. The dual signature τ=τ(w) is a path in a 4-ary tree.

Clearly, very few of the possible paths in these trees correspond to real words, signatures, and dual signatures, respectively.

The 31-ary tree, used for the words and sequences α, factors precisely into the two trees for the signatures σ and dual signatures τ.

We can also visualize each sequence α and its corresponding σ, τ as a path through the infinite block in FIG. 2 (note that only four levels are shown): on the first level, the unique block with “coordinates” (σ₁, τ₁) is traversed, on the second (σ₂, τ₂), etc. The signatures, and hence what the ten keys of the One-Row Keyboard produce, is obtained by the projection of the α_(i)'s onto the σ_(i)'s and ignoring the τ_(i)'s.

Comment 1.1 Both T9 and the ORK are examples of a reduced keyboard. A reduced keyboard R is a collection R={S^(i)}_(i) of sets (or equivalence classes) of characters S^(i)={T_(j) ^(i)}_(j) of letters and symbols. The entire collection {T_(j) ^(i)}_(i,j) is the alphabet of the keyboard R. With a physical implementation of the reduced keyboard R, we associate each S_(i) with a key, a location on the screen, or in any other manner through which the user can select the intended set. We have used the notation σ_(i) to identify this input, and this is the signature corresponding to the equivalence class in question. The dual signature is intended to exactly capture the remaining information necessary to pinpoint a character in the alphabet. If we are given a character T_(j) ^(i), and we already know that its signature is σ_(i) (and hence we know S_(i)), then the dual signature will contain the extra information to obtain T_(j) ^(i). For example, we may list the elements in the equivalence class S^(i), and then, by giving a number to each of the elements in this list, we may identify the exact character T_(j) ^(i) by this number. This is then the dual signature τ_(j); the character T_(j) ^(i) is identified with the pair σ_(i), τ_(j).

This representation of an alphabet in terms of signature and dual signature has many benefits. One is a simplified approach to spelling a word or, more generally, identifying a legal character combination for a reduced keyboard; see below. The representation also simplifies the quantitative treatment and analysis of reduced keyboards.

Comment 1.2 There is an immediate extension of the “signature, dual signature” representation to higher dimensions: a unique object is identified by the n+1-tuple (τ⁰, τ¹, . . . , τ^(n)). (With n=1 and τ⁰=σ, τ¹=τ we are back to the “signature, dual signature”.) If we require that there is a subordination among the tau's, say τ⁰→τ¹→ . . . τ^(n), then we have a tree structure. The object corresponding to a specific n+1-tuple (τ₀, τ₁, . . . , τ_(n)) is identified by the path {τ⁰=τ₀}→{τ¹=τ₁}→ . . . {τ^(n)=τ_(n)}. This points out that in certain circumstances, as in the case of menu systems, the objects in these representations may not be characters (for menus, they are “files” and “folders”).

1.2 Dictionaries for Words, Signatures, and Dual Signatures

Most paths α in the global 31-ary word tree do not correspond to valid words in English (if that is the language we are trying to type). This is immediately clear just by looking at the number of possible combinations. Suppose we consider words with at most six letters. Ignoring the “space” symbol at the end of words, there are 30⁶=729 million possible paths using six levels (or seven including the root) in the tree. This number should be compared to the approximately 300 words that correspond to 60 percent of all the printed text or to the approximately 10 words that correspond to 25 percent of the printed text. Hence, we only use one in about 2.4 million of the possible paths 60 percent of the time. Some paths we thus travel often, and most we do not travel at all.

A dictionary is one way to identify this small subset of valid paths. Initially, this is a useful way to view the dictionary: it is the collection of valid paths. Later we shall worry about the size of the dictionary, and then it becomes of interest to avoid some repetitions and not to include standard modifications of basic words (like adding “s” for the plural of a noun, etc.). We shall use the notation D for the particular dictionary we use. The standard way of organizing D is alphabetically, and when we use this we shall use the subscript w: D_(w).

There are several other views that are useful as well. For example, we may instead consider D as consisting of the sequences a corresponding to valid key combinations. We order these sequences as if the sequences represented a fractional 31-ary expansion, in increasing order. In other words, the word w with α(w)=α₁α₂ . . . thus corresponds to the number 0.α₁α₂ . . . , and these fractional expansions, corresponding to valid words, are entered in ascending order. (With any number of spaces added to the end of the α sequence, we identify the same word and the same fractional expansion.) This view of the dictionary is indicated by the subscript α: D_(α). The ordering between the sequences makes it possible to compare two sequences α¹, α²ε D_(α): we say that α¹<_(α)α²  (4) if the sequence α¹ comes before α² in D_(α), i.e. if 0.α₁ ¹α₂ ¹α₃ ¹ . . . <0.α₁ ²α₂ ²α₃ ²  (5)

Not all signatures σ correspond to words either, and some σ's correspond to more than one word. The collection of valid σ's, each entered only once, is called the signature dictionary and is denoted by S. The signature dictionary S can also be viewed in different ways. When we view it in a way analogous to D_(α), then we use the notation S_(σ). More explicitly, each σ=σ₁σ₂ . . . , corresponding to one or more words, is identified with the 11-ary fractional expansion 0.σ₁σ₂ . . . , and these are entered in an ascending order into S_(σ). This ordering is denoted by <_(σ). The unique dual signatures are collected in the dual signature dictionary T, and one view of T is T_(τ), defined in the obvious, analogous way. The notation for this ordering is <_(τ).

With the orderings <_(σ) and <_(τ) in S_(σ) and T_(τ), respectively, we may define several additional views of D. If we have two words w¹, w²ε D with corresponding signatures and dual signatures (σ¹, τ¹), (σ², τ²), then

$\begin{matrix} {\left( {\sigma^{1},\tau^{1}} \right) <_{\sigma,\tau}\left. \left( {\sigma^{2},\tau^{2}} \right)\Longleftrightarrow\left\{ \begin{matrix} {\sigma^{1} <_{\sigma}\sigma^{2}} & \; \\ {\sigma^{1} = \sigma^{2}} & {{{and}\mspace{14mu}\tau^{1}} <_{\tau}{\tau^{2}.}} \end{matrix} \right. \right.} & (6) \end{matrix}$ We shall write D_(σ,τ) for D with this ordering. We may also write D=S_(σ)(T_(τ)) to indicate this ordering. If we switch the two orderings and instead start by ordering with respect to the dual signatures, then we similarly have the ordering <_(τ,σ) and this gives us the view D_(τ,σ)=T_(τ)(S_(σ)).

For us probably the view that is most interesting is the following. It is based on interleaving the signature and dual signature sequences. More specifically, if w ε D has the signature σ=σ₁σ₂ . . . and the dual signature τ=τ₁τ₂ . . . , then we form the expansion 0.σ₁τ₁σ₂τ₂ . . . . This is the basis for the order <_(σ×τ): words are identified with their interleaved expansions and entered into D in ascending order. To indicate this view, we write D_(σ×τ). Of course, there is similarly an ordering <_(τ×σ), and the view using this is D_(τ×σ).

Let us illustrate with a small dictionary.

EXAMPLE 1.1

Suppose we have a word dictionary D^(tiny)=D_(w) ^(tiny) containing the ten words, alphabetically ordered, “and”, “cat”, “do”, “go”, “is”, “it”, “say,” “the”, “to”, and “way”. The corresponding a sequences and signatures and dual signatures are the ones in Table 1. Some of the different orderings of these words are given in Table 2.

Obviously, the different views of the dictionary do not correspond very closely to how our brains store words. The intent is to make it easier to find the word as we type using the regular keyboard or the One-Row Keyboard. How our brains have the information stored is complicated, but it is probably true that the beginning letter of the word is very important as well as the length of the word; see [19].

TABLE 1 D^(tiny) and associated sequences in alphabetical order. Word α σ τ and 11 26 13 1 7 3 2 3 2 cat 23 11 05 3 1 5 3 2 1 do 13 08 3 9 2 1 go 15 09 5 9 2 1 is 08 12 8 2 1 2 it 08 05 8 5 1 1 say 12 11 06 2 1 6 2 2 1 the 05 16 03 5 6 3 1 2 1 to 05 09 5 9 1 1 way 02 11 06 2 1 6 1 2 1

TABLE 2 D^(tiny) in increasing <_(α) order (left), increasing <_(σ,τ) order (center), and increasing <_(σ×τ) order (right). Word α σ τ way 02 11 06 2 1 6 1 2 1 to 05 09 5 9 1 1 the 05 16 03 5 6 3 1 2 1 it 08 05 8 5 1 1 is 08 12 8 2 1 2 and 11 26 13 1 7 3 2 3 2 say 12 11 06 2 1 6 2 2 1 do 13 08 3 9 2 1 go 15 09 5 9 2 1 cat 23 11 05 3 1 5 3 2 1 and 11 26 13 1 7 3 2 3 2 way 02 11 06 2 1 6 1 2 1 say 12 11 06 2 1 6 2 2 1 cat 23 11 05 3 1 5 3 2 1 do 13 08 3 9 2 1 the 05 16 03 5 6 3 1 2 1 to 05 09 5 9 1 1 go 15 09 5 9 2 1 is 08 12 8 2 1 2 it 08 05 8 5 1 1 and 11 26 13 1 7 3 2 3 2 way 02 11 06 2 1 6 1 2 1 say 12 11 06 2 1 6 2 2 1 cat 23 11 05 3 1 5 3 2 1 do 13 08 3 9 2 1 the 05 16 03 5 6 3 1 2 1 to 05 09 5 9 1 1 go 15 09 5 9 2 1 is 08 12 8 2 1 2 it 08 05 8 5 1 1 1.3 Exploiting Sparsity

Very few paths in the different dictionaries are used, and this sparsity can be exploited in several ways. With the One-Row Keyboard, we only supply the signature of the word; however, in most cases this reduced information is sufficient to uniquely identify not just the exact signature but also the exact word in the dictionary. In relatively few cases, however, there are several words with the same signature.

This sparsity also means that after a few keystrokes using a regular keyboard, a word can be identified without having to type in the remaining letters. The rest can then be added automatically, without typing. This “auto-completion” can also be taken advantage of when we use the One-Row Keyboard and the signature of the word. Of course, we expect to type more keystrokes before the exact signature has been pinpointed. Very often, however, the great sparsity in the signature dictionary means that we will have identified a unique signature before reaching the signature's end.

Then, if we decide to use these dictionaries to look up what a typed signature corresponds to, there are several questions that arise. For example:

-   -   1. How do we provide feedback to the user concerning the         progress of the typing process?     -   2. How do we report and correct typing mistakes?     -   3. How do we best resolve ambiguities between words with similar         signatures?     -   4. How do we best support auto-completion?     -   5. How do we automatically fix typos?     -   6. How do we quickly look up signatures, dual signatures, and         words?     -   7. What makes a good dictionary?     -   8. How do we add words to a dictionary?     -   9. How do we customize dictionaries depending on contexts and on         the user?         We address these in the next discussion below.         1.4 Reaching Beyond the Dictionaries

Punctuation marks and other standard symbols form an important part of written text. For a fast and seamless typing experience, it is essential that such characters can be typed in the same manner as letters, without a break in the typing flow. If one needs to bring up a special punctuation/character menu from which the correct mark can be selected, then delays are induced and loss of typing flow results.

Further, with respect to the QWERTY (or equivalent) keyboards that have common punctuation marks and extra characters adjacent to the letter keys, the experienced user already has an established pattern and existing “wiring” for such keys. To capitalize on the familiarity of this pre-wiring, for improved typing speed and ease of learning, a reduced keyboard may place such characters in more or less the same relative location as the standard QWERTY keyboard. For a preferred embodiment of the ORK, where we collapse the three rows into one, this translates into, for example, placing the period on the same key as O and L (or, more precisely, in the same equivalence class). The disambiguation engine then has to carry out the disambiguation such that an equivalence class may contain both letters used in the dictionary as well as other additional symbols. This can be achieved in several ways. One is to utilize a set of rules to create varied disambiguation results from pre-existing dictionary entries or other intermediate disambiguation results. Note that the application of such rules may be nested.

Here are a couple of specific instances of such possible rules:

Append a punctuation (such as : ; , ? ! or .) at the end of an entry so as to generate a match to the complete entered signature. For instance, the signature 6920 may be disambiguated as “How?” (Note how this further uses the Shift key to differentiate among a set of signatures: We use Shift to distinguish ? and ' from each other, just as we use Shift to distinguish ‘H’ from ‘h’. For this example, we have made the assumption that ' replaces / on the QWERTY keyboard.)

In the same manner, 0069200 may be disambiguated as “how” if we assume that two consecutive instances of a single quote are to be taken as a double quote. Note that the opening and closing double quotes may be disambiguated independently of each other so that the double quotes may apply to words as well as to sentences. (This assumes that ' replaces / on the QWERTY keyboard.)

As an example of nesting, the sequence 00692000 may be disambiguated as “How?”.

For reduced keyboards it is thus quite beneficial to support extended character sets. The legal character combinations are then not just those found in dictionaries, but also include combinations of a predefined set of legal combinations (as, for instance, given by a collection of dictionaries) with sets of other symbols. In terms of notations used in Section 1, we may include the extended set of characters as separate dual signatures corresponding to existing signatures, or we may extend the signature set as well. In the former case, we may then end up with keys as in the examples above, where there is a mixture of letters and symbols occurring in the dictionary together with symbols from the extended sets. In the latter case, for those extended characters that are assigned new signature(s), we can identify these as part of the extended character sets, and the treatment of such characters is simpler. For example, the standard solution for including symbols in the context of reduced keyboards is to put the extra symbols on separate keys (i.e., separate signatures) and then require an explicit choice of the symbol (i.e., specifying the dual signature), and then the choice of character is unique. In that particular case, what we add here is only to allow for predictive techniques to be used for symbols outside the set of legal combinations as prescribed by dictionaries.

Similarly, it is possible to extend the entire class of valid character combinations outside the combinations defined by each dictionary and specific sets of characters. For example, one dictionary may contain the constituent words of character combinations, and legal combinations are obtained by these words combined according to specific rules. If the simple dictionary consists of three words {print, queue, driver}, and it is agreed that words in this dictionary can be combined with the underline symbol ‘_’, and still obtain a legal combination, then we see that combinations like print_queue, print_driver, etc., are valid. In general, a set of dictionaries and a set of character sets can be combined, using specific rules, to obtain an extended set of legal combinations.

A spell procedure is a standard aspect of a reduced keyboard. If a particular signature sequence is entered, and it cannot be found in the dictionary, the spell procedure allows the user to provide the extra information to identify a new legal character combination (and possibly add this combination to the dictionary). The standard spell procedure, used by T9, for example, is to use a separate process if the signature is not found. In the case of T9, this is usually done through “multitap”: the key corresponding to the equivalance class of letters is typed repeatedly, and each letter in the class is uniquely associated with a specific number of taps. For example, for the standard cellphone implementation of T9, the number “2” corresponds to the letters “abc”, and one press on “2” then identifies “a”, two presses on “2” is “b”, and three is “c”. In terms of the representation using signature and dual signature, we may identify the number of key presses with the dual signature. With this, the letter “c”, say, is given by (2, 3) (sits on the key “2” and requires “3” presses). The “number of key presses” may then be specified independently of the signature, using other keys or in any other manner that allows the user to indicate his choice of the dual signatures. In case the signature has already been entered, for example, only the dual signatures then need to be provided. To spell the word “act”, for instance, we may press the keys “2”, “2”, and “8” to specify the signature. To now identify “act” among all the possible combinations with this signature, we may identify the sequence “1”, “3”, and “1” in some fashion. In this case, we may, for instance, have the keys for dual signatures “1”, “2”, “3”, and “4” separate from the signature keys, and then the dual signatures can be provided at other times during the input process, not just after the signature has been entered.

More generally, for any reduced keyboard, the dual signatures can be entered independently of the signatures. Hence, if the signatures have been entered, the dual signatures can all be entered by allowing the user to identify the possible dual signatures one by one. If there is only one possibility for the dual signature, then that choice may be omitted. Additionally, the order in which the dual signatures are entered is also flexible; often we assume that the entry process goes in some predetermined order (typically from left to right or the other way around), but this is not necessary.

Further, different prediction techniques can be used to simplify the required user interaction as the spell process proceeds.

Notice that the independence of signature and dual signature is what allows the same key to be reused for specifying the dual signature once the signature is given. For example, by overloading “up/down” to pinpoint the dual signature in a list of possible interpretations, for each of the signature entries, is an example of the “signature, dual signature” representation of a character.

Comment 1.3 In the following discussion, we will describe various methods of carrying out various operations on a set of dictionary entries, sometimes utilizing the user feedback and input in the process. These methods will have as output possibly a second set of entries and, hence, are equivalent to mapping one set of entries onto another. More importantly, these methods can be used in stages such that the combined output of one or more stages can serve as input for another method. Various arrangements are possible of such combined mappings. For instance, punctuated endings from original dictionary entries may serve as input entries for an approximate typing stage which takes into account user typing errors. Thus, it is important to realize that when we talk of dictionary entries henceforth, these should be understood not only as the original dictionary entries, but also as any permutation and combination of a constructed set of entries arising from any of these methods.

Similarly, in the following, we will refer to duals of a signature sequence as valid alternatives. It is important to realize that these valid alternatives may actually be a result of an approximate matching process or a rule-based dictionary mapping or for that matter any mapping produced by such a method. Thus, these duals that we refer to may not be exact duals of the entered or dictionary entry signatures, but simply a mapping. A specific instance we will discuss later, is how a set of auto-completion alternatives may be generated for each of the valid duals of an entered signature sequence that is being typed. In that case, the valid dual may actually arise from the approximate matching method and thus may not be an exact dual of the signature entered by the user.

2 Approximate Typing

2.1 User Input and Reduced Keyboards

One of the drawbacks of using a reduced keyboard is the fact that when the user has entered a set of keystrokes and the feedback from the device does not coincide with the user's intentions, it is often hard to identify the underlying reason. Sometimes the unexpected behavior is a consequence of the intended character combination not being in a dictionary. Probably much more frequently, however, the explanation is a typing mistake. It is often hard for the user to decide exactly at what point a mistake was made since the entered key sequence is not in one-to-one correspondence with a character sequence. Rather than trying to understand where the error occurred, the user then often ends up erasing the entire combination and starting again. This is particularly frustrating when the input sequence is long, and, unfortunately, this is also when typing errors frequently occur.

A similar problem is encountered when the user is not quite sure how to spell a certain word or only knows parts of the word or character combination. With a standard keyboard, one way to handle such a situation is to enter an approximation of the intended word, and the meaning is still likely to be communicated to the reader. With a reduced keyboard, this approach is rarely available since the character combination on the screen is typically quite different than that of the intended word. To remedy this, the user may then try to experiment with different potential spellings to reach the correct one, and, if he fails, he may experience not just a sense of interruption of typing flow, but of actually being stuck. This is a serious drawback of any reduced keyboard and should be addressed.

In the following, we consider the case when the input from the user is not quite correct or at least the entered signature sequence is not matching that of the word the user intended. The basic assumption we shall make is that the entered signature sequence is approximately correct and, hence, there is a similarity between the intended signature sequence and the one entered.

The user intends to input a sequence of words (or other character combinations) w_(i), i=0, . . . , N, often collected in a sentence s: s=w₀w₁ . . . w_(N).  (7)

(What constitutes the appropriate delimiter for the different character combinations w_(i) and for the sentences s is of no real significance for the current discussion.) Using a reduced keyboard R (see Comment 1.1 above), the user provides input to the system, and based on this input, the system provides feedback to the user; see FIG. 3. In the case of a reduced keyboard, the input is typically ambiguous, so part of the task for the system is to disambiguate the different interpretations and provide possible predictions based on the user input. The user can then provide more input to the system by selecting between different possibilities for the character combination w_(i) under consideration.

The user input is of course assumed to be a reflection of the user's intentions. For a reduced keyboard, the normal assumption is that the signature is the correct one; however, if we add the complication that the user may have mistyped, then the signature sequence may not be the intended or desired one and, hence, the system cannot rely on the accuracy of the signature for its predictions.

The signature will still serve as an important indication of the user's intent, but the ambiguity may increase if we allow the user to only provide an approximation of the intended input.

More specifically, in the case of a reduced keyboard, each keystroke by the user represents an equivalence class of unique characters. Hence, with a certain sequence of keystrokes, a unique set of character combinations, consistent with the equivalence classes of each key, is generated. Let us call this set of character combinations the “input set.” The reduced keyboard then works with a disambiguation process to prioritize among the character combinations in the input set in order to provide the user with feedback for possible further interaction.

In the case of approximate typing on a reduced keyboard, the user's keystrokes generate a larger class of possible character combinations and the disambiguation process operates on this larger class. For example, besides the input set of character combinations corresponding to the exact keystrokes, there may be other possible keystrokes, each with its own set of character combinations, that enter into the disambiguation process, and different rules and methods may be used by the disambiguation process for determining how all of these should be weighed. The regular approach for typing on a reduced keyboard is when only one set of character combinations (the input set) enters into the disambiguation process, and, at the opposite end of the spectrum, we have the situation when the disambiguation process uses all possible keystrokes and weighs these based on the actual user input.

2.2 A Probabilistic Analysis

To illustrate some of the issues involved and to gain some further insights into effective disambiguation processes for approximate typing on reduced keyboards, we shall consider a maximum likelihood approach.

Let us for now consider just the single character combination w in isolation and ignore that some of the probabilistic information may be obtained from context and other parts of this or other sentences. It will be convenient to simplify the discussion to a real-time, on-the-fly type of processing where there is a specified order, say left to right. We assume further that the user has in mind the character combination v=c₀ . . . c₁, and, in the process of entering input corresponding to this target, he enters certain keystrokes. The user's actual keystrokes correspond to the signature σ^(a)=σ₀ ^(a) . . . σ_(J) ^(a), and his target signature is σ^(v)=σ₀ ^(v) . . . σ₁ ^(v). (Notice, in particular, that the number J+1 of actual keystrokes may not be the same as the intended number I.)

From a maximum likelihood point of view, we are interested in finding the best solution {circumflex over (v)}=argmax_(v)Prob(v|σ ^(a)),  (8) where the maximum is taken over all the intended words v. More generally, we may also consider the N-best solutions {right arrow over (v)}={right arrow over (v)} ^((N)) =N-argmax_(v)Prob(v|σ ^(a)).  (9)

In order to solve (8) (the same argument applies to (9)), we notice that by the definition of conditional probability and since the keystrokes actually entered do not change, the right-hand side equals

$\begin{matrix} \begin{matrix} {{\arg\mspace{14mu}{\max_{\upsilon}{{Prob}\left( {\upsilon\text{❘}\sigma^{a}} \right)}}} = {\arg{\mspace{11mu}\;}{\max_{\upsilon}{{Prob}\left( {\upsilon,\sigma^{a}} \right)}}}} \\ {= {\arg\mspace{14mu}{\max_{\upsilon}{{Prob}\left( {\upsilon,\sigma^{\upsilon},\sigma^{a}} \right)}}}} \\ {= {\arg\mspace{14mu}{\max_{\upsilon}{{{Prob}\left( {{\upsilon\text{❘}\sigma^{\upsilon}},\sigma^{a}} \right)}{{Prob}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma^{a}} \right)}}}}} \end{matrix} & (10) \end{matrix}$

It is a reasonable approximation to say that the first factor here, Prob(v|σ^(v), σ^(a)), is independent of σ^(a). (In other words, learning the value of σ^(a) does not provide any additional information about v once we know σ^(v); v and σ^(a) are conditionally independent given σ^(v); cf. [51].) If we accept that, we get {circumflex over (v)}≈argmax_(v)Prob(v|σ ^(v))Prob(σ^(v)|σ^(a))  (11) (It is easy to come up with examples that suggest that the approximation sometimes is not very precise. Some typing errors are probably more likely to occur for certain specific letter combinations in a group of combinations with the same signature.) This factorization is easy to understand. The first factor corresponds to the maximum likelihood prediction of the regular reduced keyboard, disregarding typing errors. The second factor depends on the probabilities of typing errors as the user keys in a certain signature. For the optimal solution, the product is formed between the probability of a character combination, given an intended signature, and the probability for a signature being the intended one, given the actual input, and then the largest such product is found.

It is not entirely obvious how to estimate the second factor Prob(σ^(v)|σ^(a)) in (11) based on some specific sampling statistics. In contrast, the probability Prob(σ^(a)|σ^(v)) is easy to obtain; for example, just start typing the intended word v over and over, and then observe the actual signatures typed. With this in mind, we shall rewrite (11) using Bayes formula:

$\begin{matrix} {{{Prob}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma^{a}} \right)} = \frac{{{Prob}\left( {\sigma^{a}\text{❘}\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}{{Prob}\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}}{{Prob}\left( \sigma^{a} \right)}} & (12) \end{matrix}$ Inserting this into (11) we find {circumflex over (v)}≈argmax_(v)Prob(v|σ ^(v))Prob(σ^(a)|σ^(v))Prob(σ^(v)).  (13)

EXAMPLE 2.1

The signatures of the character combinations “wondr” and “slyer” are the same. Let us call the signature σ^(a). Only the latter of these combinations is an English word. Hence, if the user enters this signature σ^(a), a disambiguation system based on exact signature entry will display “slyer.” However, let us look at probabilities: Prob(wonder)≈6.5·10⁻⁵Prob(slyer)≦2.7·10⁻⁷  (14) (These are estimates using Corpus 1 and Corpus 2; there are approximately 240 occurrences of “wonder” and no occurrences of “slyer” among the approximately 3.7 million words in these two corpora.) In addition, we notice that it is very easy to misspell “wonder” since the two letters “d” and “e” sit on the same key and the letter “r” is next to them. Hence, the probability is quite high for entering the signature of “wondr”/“slyer” when we intend to enter the signature of “wonder.”

Let us assume that “wonder” is the only valid character combination corresponding to the signature of that word and similarly for “slyer.” Then the disambiguation system should favor “wonder” ahead of “slyer” (if it is based on the maximum likelihood estimation and the approximation (11) as long as Prob(σ^(v) ⁽¹⁾ |σ^(a))>Prob(σ^(v) ⁽²⁾ |σ^(a))  (15) with v⁽¹⁾=wonder and v⁽²⁾=slyer. Equivalently, using (13) instead, this happens exactly when Prob(σ^(a)|σ^(v) ⁽¹⁾ )Prob(σ^(v) ⁽¹⁾ )>Prob(σ^(a)|σ^(v) ⁽²⁾ )Prob(σ^(v) ⁽²⁾ ).  (16) Since we are assuming that there is only one word with the signature σ^(v) ⁽¹⁾ and one with σ^(v) ⁽²⁾ , by the sampling estimate above we have Prob(σ^(v) ⁽¹⁾ )=Prob(wonder)≈6.5·10⁻⁵Prob(σ^(v) ⁽²⁾ )=Prob(slyer)≦2.7·10⁻⁷  (17) Hence, inserting this into the inequality (16), we see that the criterion is essentially Prob(σ^(a)|σ^(v) ⁽¹⁾ )>Prob(σ¹|σ^(v) ⁽²⁾ )/250.  (18) In other words, unless the user is approximately 250 times more likely to type the signature of “slyer” correctly compared to his likelihood of entering the signature of “wondr” when he had “wonder” in mind, the disambiguation system should favor “wonder” instead of “slyer”. (In fact, the actual number may be considerably higher than 250 times since there were no occurrences of “slyer” in the corpora while there were 240 occurrences of “wonder”.) For User 1, a small sample experiment indicates that the actual probabilities are Prob(σ^(a)|σ^(v) ⁽¹⁾ )≈0.05 Prob(σ^(a)|σ^(v) ⁽²⁾ )≈0.97.  (19) Hence, we have Prob(σ¹|σ^(v) ⁽¹⁾ )Prob(σ^(v) ⁽¹⁾ )≈3.2510⁻⁶ Prob(σ^(a)|σ^(v) ⁽²⁾ )Prob(σ^(v) ⁽²⁾ )≦2.710⁻⁷.  (20) So, at least for User 1, it is more than 10 times as likely that he has mistyped “wonder” than intending to type “slyer.”

This probabilistic analysis makes it clear that we may obtain a significantly better prediction of the user's intentions with an approximate typing system compared with the normal assumption of exact typing. In particular, we may improve the user's overall typing experience. In spite of this, there still may be reasons to assume that the keystrokes exactly reflect the user's intentions. For example, this assumption may result in a lower complexity of the disambiguation system and less expensive searches since the set of valid alternatives is smaller. It may also be hard to find the probabilities for different typing errors: the typing errors may not only be highly dependent on the user, but also the context and the typing speed (transpositions are good examples of errors highly dependent on the speed). And, the user may operate in a mode of making absolutely certain that no typing errors are entered.

However, a user typing on a reduced keyboard is especially prone to some typing errors. So it may be argued that it is particularly important to allow for approximate typing on these keyboards. If there are drawbacks of an approximate typing system, then there are often different methods to alleviate these. For example, in order to reduce the set of possible interpretations of entered signatures, we may consider a threshold based on probability of occurrence of certain errors or character combinations. A similar thresholding technique is implicitly already built into the typical approaches for “exact typing,” since there is always the possibility that the user enters a character combination that does not correspond to anything generated by the dictionary. (To handle this, the reduced keyboard uses a “spell” mode.)

There are a number of additional ways to reduce the extra complexity of approximate typing. The disambiguation system may use the basic assumption that the entered signature is correct, and then have an associated set of alternative character combinations consistent with the signature, and then have a second set relying on approximations of the entered signature. This second set can then be used, for instance, if the user indicates with a key press (or some other way) that the first displayed alternatives are insufficient.

A probabilistic assessment of different alternatives may be unnecessary if we are willing to let the user decide between the alternatives that the disambiguation system generates.

In other situations, even rather crude estimations are satisfactory for finding character combinations to present to the user. In the case of long words, for example, it is more likely that the entered character combination singles out the intended word with great certainty and that most of the other combinations are quite improbable. Since it is particularly frustrating for the user to enter a large number of characters and then to not obtain the intended word, this case alone means that even a rather crude approximate typing system may have a great impact on the user's experience.

Approximate typing does not have to rely on probabilistic analysis at all. Fundamentally, approximate typing relies on pattern recognition for its predictions. In this setting, the registered pattern is the actual keystrokes σ^(a), and the objective is to find the label σ^(v) of the intended signature word v. As a consequence there are many different methods that we may use. For example, there are different types of rule-based approaches, neural networks, entropy-based methods, etc., and then combinations of all of these. Next we shall look at a simple way of measuring the similarities of the entered signature with that of other character combinations.

2.3 The Standard Edit Distance

To measure the similarity between the entered signature and that of other combinations, there are many possible approaches. One is to use different similarity measures. For example, we may introduce a cost function to measure how well the entered sequence approximates the intended sequence. As a special case of this, we may look for different (pseudo-)distance functions with the basic property that an increase in distance corresponds to less similarity. A commonly used distance function or, more precisely, family of distance functions is based on the so-called edit distance.

The edit distance is typically used with the common alphabet and symbols (including the empty symbol ε); cf. [28], [63], [22]. Here we shall use it with the ORK and with signature sequences. For now, we shall assume that each keystroke on the ORK is identified with a unique number σ=0, . . . 9, and each signature sequence is given by a string σ=σ₁σ₂ . . . σ_(N).  (21) The empty string is denoted by ε. The basic idea behind the edit distance is to have a set of elementary transformations T={T_(i)} and a set of costs C={C_(i)} for applying each one of these. Then the edit distance ed(σ^(A), σ^(B)) from the sequence σ^(A) to σ^(B) is the minimal cost of any sequence of transformations, applied one after the other, that transforms σ^(A) into σ^(B). Typically, it is assumed that the overall cost is additive and, hence, is obtained from each of the individual costs by adding them.

The standard, most basic edit distance uses the transformations insertion (ε→σ, where σ is a symbol in the alphabet used), deletion (σ→ε), and substitution (σ₁→σ₂), and each is assigned a cost of 1. Notice that insertion and deletion are converse to each other, and that insertion has the effect of replacing two consecutive symbols σ₁σ₂ by the triplet σ₁σ₃σ₂ (remember the empty symbol ε is allowed, so this allows us to insert a symbol at the beginning or the end of a string of symbols).

With the edit distance, the approximate string matching is viewed as an alignment problem. A couple of examples will illustrate this (the examples come from [22]).

EXAMPLE 2.2

The edit distance from “food” to “money” is at most four. A sequence of transformations is given by food→mood→mon_(^)d→moned→money A more instructive way to display this is to put one word on top of the other with a gap in the top one for every insertion and a gap in the bottom one for every deletion. In this way, columns with different symbols correspond to substitions, and the number of editing steps and the total editing cost is the number of columns with non-equal entries. For the example above we have

$\begin{matrix} f & o & o & \; & d \\ m & o & n & e & y \end{matrix}$ So, ed(food, money)≦4, and in this case it is not hard to see that it is exactly four. With longer words it is not as clear when we have obtained the optimal set of transformations. For example, here is a more complex situation.

$\begin{matrix} a & l & g & o & r & \; & i & \; & t & h & m \\ a & l & \; & t & r & u & i & s & t & i & c \end{matrix}$ Clearly, the ed(algorithm, altruistic)≦6, but it is not obvious whether there is a better set of transformations, with a lower total cost.

Using the notation from the above example, the key observation in order to efficiently find the optimal set of transformations is the following: if we remove the last column for an optimal set of transformations, the remaining columns must represent the shortest edit sequence for the remaining substrings. Otherwise, if the substrings had a shorter edit sequence, we could just append the last column and get an overall shorter edit sequence.

Using this observation, it is easy to obtain a recursive algorithm for obtaining the edit distance between two strings. Let us introduce the function E(i, j)=E(i, j, σ^(A), σ^(B)) for i=0, . . . , #σ^(A) and j=0, . . . , #σ^(B) defined as the minimal cost (or effort) to transform the subsequence σ^(i) of the i first characters in σ^(A) into the subsequence σ^(j) of the j first characters in σ^(B). Obviously, E(0,0)=0 and E(i, 0)=i since the optimal way to convert a sequence with i characters into the empty string is with i deletions. Similarly, E(0, j)=j and the optimal transformations are just j insertions. With this we have the necessary initialization to get the recursion going as long as we find a way to express how to add the last column in the editing process. If both rows of the last column contain a character, then the optimal, last editing step is a substitution and the total cost becomes E(i−1,j−1)+[σ_(i) ^(A)≠σ_(j) ^(B)] (where [σ_(i) ^(A)≠σ_(j) ^(B)]=0 if the i:th character σ^(A) is the same as the j:th character of σ^(B) and 1 otherwise). On the other hand, if the top row contains an empty character and the bottom one a non-empty one, then we have an insertion, and the total cost is E(i, j−1)+1. If we have a non-empty character on the top row and an empty one on the bottom, then the corresponding operation is a deletion and the total cost is E(i−1, j)+1. The optimal choice is the minimum of these three alternatives: E(i,j)=min{E(i−1,j−1)+[σ_(i) ^(A)≠σ_(j) ^(B) ],E(i,j−1)+1, E(i−1,j)+1}  (22) With the initialization E(0,j)=j  (23) E(i,0)=i,  (24) we may recursively go through the equation (22) and obtain the ed(σ^(A),σ^(B))=E(m,n) with m=#σ ^(A) and n=#σ ^(B).  (25)

More general transformations are often quite easy to add. For example, if we also want to allow for transpositions of adjacent characters, then it is not enough to just consider the last column, since this type of transposition affects two characters. Instead, we have to consider the last two columns. The total cost for the transposition is then E(i−2,j−2)+1+[σ_(i−1) ^(A)≠σ_(j) ^(B)]+[σ_(i) ^(A)≠σ_(j−1) ^(B)] (when i, j≧2) and

$\begin{matrix} {{E\left( {i,j} \right)} = {\min\left\{ \begin{matrix} {{{E\left( {{i - 1},{j - 1}} \right)} + \left\lbrack {\sigma_{i}^{A} \neq \sigma_{j}^{B}} \right\rbrack},} \\ {{{E\left( {i,{j - 1}} \right)} + 1},} \\ {{{E\left( {{i - 1},j} \right)} + 1},} \\ {{E\left( {{i - 2},{j - 2}} \right)} + 1 + \left\lbrack {\sigma_{i - 1}^{A} \neq \sigma_{j}^{B}} \right\rbrack + {\left\lbrack {\sigma_{i}^{A} \neq \sigma_{j - 1}^{B}} \right\rbrack.}} \end{matrix} \right.}} & (26) \end{matrix}$ 2.4 Some Sample Errors Using the ORK

In this section, we shall start by collecting some hopefully representative typing errors.

Some sample typing errors # Intended Signature Typed Signature Last in dict. 1. catalogue 2040884628 catalbmc 204084628 catal 2. out 864 oms 861 lux 3. reference 323232522 reverycc 32323522 revery 4. while 15782 shille 157882 shille 5. encyclopedia, 2525288922707 ench. 25258 ench 6. large 80342 laveb 80324 lave 7. girls. 473818 give.s 473281 tirel 8. catalogue. 2040884628 catalombc 204088642 catalo 9. order 83223 over 8323 over 10. answer, 0511237 ansccv 051223 ans 11. which 15725 winkeh 175725 winke 12. following 388881754 followibh 388881745 followi 13. idea 7220 kea 720 ke 14. enjoy 25685 chun.h 256585 chun 15. suggestions 16442147851 suggestins 1644214751 suggestin 16. magazines. 6040075218 magazins 60400751 magazin 17. title 47482 titilc 474782 titil 18. school 125888 schooi 125887 schoo 19. chairs. 2507318 chaires. 25073218 chaire 20. classroom 280113886 classrom 28011386 classro 21. aim 076 ainm 0756 ain 22. such 1625 sush 1615 sush 23. these 45212 byes 4521 thes 24. conveniently? 2853257254859 confidhc 28537252 confid 25. bulletin 46882475 gulleybih 468825475 gulley 26. decide 222722 deceicc 2222722 decei 27. shelves, 15283217 she.c 15282 shel 28. letter 824423 lege 8242 lege 29. labels 804281 labos 80481 labo 30. something. 1862457548 somethinc. 1862457528 somethin 31. slogans. 18840518 sobahs. 1840518 sob 32. giving 473754 biting 474754 biting 33. thought 4586454 though 458645 though 34. business 46175211 guishcs 4671521 guis 35. opposite. 899817428 opposit. 89981748 opposit 36. these 45212 ther 4523 ther 37. followed? 388881229 rolls.cc 38881822 rolls 38. request 3206214 reamsb 320614 reams 39. expressed 219321122 exprescc 21932122 expres 40. correct? 28332249 corvet? 2833249 corvet 41. followed? 388881229 foolsccc? 388812229 foolsc 42. checking 25227754 endiiihb 25277754 endi 43. necessary 522211035 neessavh 52211035 nee 44. which 15725 wien 1725 wien 45. conservation 285123304785 consera 2851230 conser 46. holds 58821 nod 582 nod 47. muddy? 662259 muddch? 6622259 mudd 48. topic 48972 bloke 48872 booke 49. language 80546042 languave 80546032 langua 50. topic 48972 topicc 489722 topic

Let us look a little closer at these errors. First of all, the first three signatures are correct for all entries except for errors 2, 11, 13, 21, 22, 32, 34, 44, 46, and 48. The first four signatures are correct except for these errors and, additionally, errors 6, 7, 9, 10, 14, 26, 28, 29, 31, 36, 42, and 43. In many cases, the error causes the signature sequence not to be in the dictionary. Two common errors are transposition and “double-typing” a signature that should only occur once or, vice versa, “single-typing” when it should be “double-typed.” This seems particularly common for signatures 8, 1, and 2. In the next table we have collected various observations. In the column “Leaving dict.” we have recorded whether the error is causing the typed signature not to be in the dictionary; “Desired transf.” is an attempt to see what transformation is needed to correct the error or get the user back on track in typing after an error has occurred, and “Unique compl. before” indicates whether the error could have been avoided by just using a uniqueness-based auto-completion before the error occurred. The underscore in the “Typed signature” column indicates where the signature leaves the dictionary. If we count the relative position of a character with respect to this underscore, letting the first character after the underscore correspond to 0 and the one to the left of the underscore (hence still corresponding to something in the dictionary) be −1, then we may identify the first character to be changed. This then gives us information up to what point the edit distance (in the recursive formulation we just went through) is 0. This location of the first character impacted by the typing error is recorded in the column “1st character loc.”

Some observations for sample typing errors Unique 1st Leaving compl. character # dict. Desired transf. before Intended signature Typed signature loc. 1. y 8 → 88 n 2040884628 20408_4628 0 2. ? 1 → 4 n 864 861 — 3. y 3 → 32 n 323232522 323235_22 −1 4. y 88 → 8 n 15782 157882 (?) — 5. y 8 → 28 n 2525288922707 25258_(—) −1 6. y 24 → 42 n 80342 8032_4 −1 7. y 32 → 3 n 473818 47328_1 −2 8. y 64 → 46 n 2040884628 204088_642 0 9. n 2 → 22 n 83223 8323 — 10. y 2 → 1 n 0511237 051_223 0 11. y 757 → 57 n 15725 17572_5 −4 12. y 45 → 54 n 388881754 3888817_45 0 13. y 2 → 22 n 7220 72_0 0 14. y 58 → 85 n 25685 2565_85 0 15. y 7 → 78 n 16442147851 164421475_1 −1 16. y 1 → 21 y 6040075218 6040075_1 0 17. y 7 → ε n 474827 47478_2 −2 18. y 87 → 88 y 125888 12588_7 0 19. y 21 → 1 n 2507318 250732_18 −1 20. y 8 → 88 y 280113886 2801138_6 0 21. y 56 → 6 n 076 075_6 −1 22. y 2 → 1 n 1625 1615_(—) −2 23. n 1 → 12 n 45212 4521 ? 24. y 7 → 2 n 2853257254859 285372_52 +1 25. y 54 → 4 n 46882475 468825_475 −1 26. y 22 → 2 n 222722 22227_22 −2 27. y 2 → 32 n 15283217 1528_2 0 28. y 4 → 44 n 824423 8242_(?) −1 29. y 4 → 42 n 804281 8048_1 −1 30. y 2 → 4 y 1862457548 18624575_28 0 31. y 8 → 88 n 18840518 184_0518 −1 32. n 4 → 3 n 473754 474754 — 33. n ε → 4 n 4586454 458645 — 34. y 71 → 17 n 46175211 4671_521 −2 35. y 4 → 42 n 899817428 8998174_8 0 36. n 3 → 1 n 45212 4523 — 37. y 8 → 88 n 388881229 38881_822 −1 38. y 1 → 21 n 3206214 32061_4 −1 39. y 1 → 11 n 219321122 219321_22 0 40. y 2 → 22 n 28332249 283324_9 −1 41. y 8 → 88 n 388881229 388812_229 −2 42. y 27 → 22 n 25227754 2527_7754 −1 43. y 2 → 22 n 522211035 522_11035 0 44. n ε → 5 n 15725 1725 — 45. y 3 → 33 n 285123304785 285123_0 0 46. n 8 → 88 n 58821 582 — 47. y 22 → 2 n 662259 6622_259 0 48. n 88 → 89 n 48972 48872 — 49. y 3 → 4 y 80546042 805460_32 0 50. y 22 → 2 n 48972 48972_2 0

There seem to be four different types of errors that we may identify in these tables.

-   -   1. Errors with the user continuing to perceived end of the word;     -   2. Same as previous but with punctuation marks;     -   3. Errors for which the user stopped typing before reaching the         end; and     -   4. Errors that result in a different legal word.

For the two first types of errors, the error distance probably provides a good approach. For the third type, a Beginning Of Word (BOW) based edit distance is probably better. Also, for these types of errors, the detection typically happens at the beginning of the word when an intelligent backspace may provide a good solution. The last type seems to require another approach using the alternatives that are presented to the user.

So, for now let us focus on errors of the first type. First, we consider the complexity of using the edit distance to identify candidate words corresponding to the signature sequence the user has input. We identify candidate sequences by calculating the edit distance (we shall use the edit distance with four basic operations, i.e., include transpositions). To calculate the edit distance, we use dynamic programming and obtain the edit distance by calculating the cost (effort) matrix. Hence, for each candidate sequence, the complexity is proportional to the number of entries in this matrix we have to calculate. This means that if we make the assumption that the four first characters of the input sequence are correct, then the number of entries we need to calculate is significantly reduced. For example, say that the cost matrix is of dimensions 8×8. Then, by the assumption about the first four keystrokes being correct, the resulting number of calculations is reduced from approximately 8×8 to 4×4, i.e, about a quarter. This effect is then further amplified by the fact that the number of candidate words that we have to consider decay essentially exponentially with the number of keystrokes we assume to be correct.

In addition, we see from the tables above that the typing error typically occurs close to the point of leaving the dictionary. In fact, in most cases the error occurs within two characters of the exit point. In terms of the calculation of the cost matrix, this means that only a submatrix of size 4×4 needs to be considered. However, the overall savings in not having to calculate the cost matrix for each candidate towards the end of the signature sequence is less since there are fewer and fewer words that are candidates towards the end of the input sequence.

Now, if we use the edit distance to identify candidate words that may correspond to the intended input sequence, it often happens that there are several candidates within, say, an edit distance 1. Then there are several criteria we may use to further refine the selection of such candidates. The simplest is to order these candidates according to probability of use, but there are many other ways as well. For instance, we may introduce different costs for different types of errors. If we choose that approach, transpositions should probably have a low cost (see the tables above) and so should the errors 88→8, 8→88, 22→2 and 2→22. Also, errors that occur close to the exit point compared to errors far from this point (of leaving the dictionary) should have a lower cost. However, these more refined considerations may not be necessary, since the edit distance combined with frequency ordering is remarkably accurate.

Candidate words within a small edit distance from typed signature # Intended Signature Typed Signature Candidate Signature Edit distance Rel. frequency 1. catalogue 2040884628 catalbmc 204084628 catalogue 2040884628 1 2317 3. reference 323232522 reverycc 32323522 reference 323232522 1 7496 referred 32323322 1 5834 refercc 3232322 1 1100 reversed 32323122 1 1096 reverend 32323252 1 561 reverted 32323422 1 284 reverence 323232522 1 248 revered 3232322 1 183 fevered 3232322 1 65 refereed 32323222 1 23 12. following 388881754 followibh 388881745 following 388881754 1 26288 15. suggestions 16442147851 suggestins 1644214751 suggesting 1644214754 1 2233 suggestions 16442147851 1 1899 16. magazines 604007521 magazins 604007 magazine 60400752 1 4456 magazines 604007521 1 1589 20. classroom 280113886 classrom 28011386 classroom 280113886 1 2111 35. opposite 89981742 opposit 8998174 opposite 89981742 1 5492 opposing 89981754 1 913 37. followed 38888122 rolls.cc 388818 followed 38888122 1 14592 39. expressed 219321122 exprescc 21932122 expressed 219321122 1 6994 40. correct 2833224 corvet 283324 correct 2833224 1 6046 coffee 283322 1 5724 coffer 283323 1 23 doffed 283322 1 17 47. muddy 66225 muddch 662225 muddy 66225 1 603 49. language 80546042 languavc 80546032 language 80546042 1 17960 50. topic 48972 topicc 489722 topic 48972 1 2297 topica 489721 1 1838 2.5 Modifying the Edit Distance

One of our basic goals in this section is to describe an effective disambiguation system for approximate typing using a reduced keyboard. We have used the maximum likelihood approach to illustrate some of the issues, cf. Subsection 2.2. If we base our design on this approach and equation (11) or (13), then we are faced with the problem of finding estimates for Prob(σ^(v)|σ^(a)) (in the case of equation (11)) or Prob(σ^(a)|σ^(v)) (in the case of equation (13)). These expressions reflect the probabilities for typing errors, and one possibility is to experimentally go ahead and type a lot and obtain estimates for either of these and then store these approximations. This is in principle quite straightforward, but the storage requirements may easily make this impractical. Another possibility is to instead establish a model for these probabilities, and then use the model to calculate the required conditional probabilities at runtime by comparing the entered signature against valid character combinations. The challenge with this may be the search time. The modelling approach is what we shall consider more closely in this and the next couple of subsections. As a general observation, the problems and challenges are quite similar to those encountered in connection with machine translation from one language to another; cf. [35], p. 219, [32], p. 576, [42], p. 589, [8], and [50].

The models we shall explore here use the edit distance. The standard edit distance works surprisingly well as a similarity measure in order to identify possible interpretations of the user's intentions based on the actual entered signature. Heuristically, we would expect alternatives with a larger edit distance to be less likely than signatures with a smaller distance. This type of reasoning is often sufficient to order the alternatives for the user to choose from; however, identifying more precise connection between probabilities and the edit distance requires some further analysis.

We start with a general observation concerning measures of similarity and probabilities. Suppose we have a measure C that measures similarity in such a way that a small value of C(σ^(v), σ^(a)) corresponds to the signatures σ^(v) and σ^(a) being similar or close. Suppose the user intends to type the signature σ^(v). Suppose further that he sometimes enters σ^(a) ¹ and sometimes σ^(a) ² . Now, if the user is more likely to enter σ^(a) ¹ than σ^(a) ² , then it seems that, at least for this user, σ^(a) ¹ is closer to σ^(v). In other words, it seems desirable to require Prob(σ^(a) ² |σ^(v))≦Prob(σ^(a) ¹ |σ^(v))

C(σ^(v),σ^(a) ² )≧C(σ^(v),σ^(a) ¹ ).  (27) Similarly, it is reasonable to expect that C should satisfy Prob(σ^(v)|σ^(a) ² )≦Prob(σ^(v)|σ^(a) ¹ )

C(σ^(a) ² ,σ^(v))≧C(σ^(a) ¹ ,σ^(v)).  (28) Assuming now that C is defined on all pairs of signatures (including those not necessarily corresponding to valid signatures) these two equations (27) and (28) are consequences of the monotonicity property

$\begin{matrix} {\left. \frac{1}{{Prob}\left( {\sigma^{A}\text{❘}\sigma^{B}} \right)}\uparrow\Longrightarrow{C\left( {\sigma^{A},\sigma^{B}} \right)}\uparrow \right..} & (29) \end{matrix}$

In order to guarantee the property (29), we must have access to the actual conditional probabilities. As we noted above, this may sometimes be infeasible and so we are now instead looking for a model of these conditional probabilities. Let us call these model probabilities p(σ^(B)|σ^(A)). So, for modelling purposes we may look for similarity measures with the property

$\begin{matrix} {\left. \frac{1}{p\left( {\sigma^{A}\text{❘}\sigma^{B}} \right)}\uparrow\Longrightarrow{C\left( {\sigma^{A},\sigma^{B}} \right)}\uparrow \right..} & (30) \end{matrix}$

With this, let us go back to the standard edit distance C=ed based on the four nontrivial transformations substitution, insertion, deletion, and transposition (in addition to the trivial identity); cf. (26). It does not necessarily satisfy (29), and this can be traced back to the cost 1 used for each of the elementary transformations. (Generally speaking, if, say, transpositions are much more likely to occur than any of the other nontrivial transformations, then ed will assign too much distance between a pair of signatures that differ by transpositions for (29) to hold.)

So, the problem we want to solve is then to find a reasonable class of models and a corresponding set of similarity measures for which the monotonicity property (30) holds.

Since the costs of the elementary transformations caused the standard edit distance to fail the property (29), we shall go ahead and modify these costs. To simplify the notations a little, we first number the elementary transformations from 0 to 5: T₀ is the trivial identity transformation, T₁ substitution, T₂ insertion, T₃ deletion, and T₄ transposition. We let {right arrow over (T)}={T_(i)}_(i=0) ⁴. We also introduce the notation ed(σ^(A), σ^(B), {right arrow over (c)}) for the edit distance based on certain costs {right arrow over (c)}={c_(i)}_(i=0) ⁴, with one c_(i) for each of the operations T_(i), i=0, . . . 4. In case we choose c₀=0, c_(i)=1, i=1, . . . , 4,  (31) we obtain the standard edit distance (based on the four nontrivial transformations).

Suppose we let p_(i), i=0 . . . , 4, be the actual probabilities of each of the elementary transformations. We then set {right arrow over (c)}_(*)={c*_(i)}_(i) with

$\begin{matrix} {{c_{i}^{*} = {\ln\frac{1}{p_{i}}}},{i = 0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},4,{{and}\mspace{14mu}{also}}} & (32) \\ {{{ed}_{*}\left( {\sigma^{A},\sigma^{B}} \right)} = {{{ed}\left( {\sigma^{A},\sigma^{B},c^{*}} \right)}.}} & (33) \end{matrix}$

We can now define a preliminary model for the actual conditional probabilities. We simply let p _(*)(σ^(A)|σ^(B))=exp(−ed _(*)(σ^(A),σ^(B))).  (34) Clearly, the monotonicity (30) is built into this definition. We also remark that if we let #T_(i)=#T_(i)(σ^(A), σ^(B)) denote the number of times the transform T_(i) is used in the calculation of ed_(*) when transforming σ^(A) into σ^(B), then (34) can be rewritten as

$\begin{matrix} {{p_{*}\left( {\sigma^{A}\text{❘}\sigma^{B}} \right)} = {\prod\limits_{i = 0}^{4}\; p_{i}^{\# T_{i}}}} & (35) \end{matrix}$ Hence, this looks as if the application of each of the different transforms are independent events, each with probability p_(i).

Now, there are several problems with (35). Perhaps most obvious is the fact that the expressions p_(*)(σ^(B)|σ^(A)) are not necessarily probability distributions. This can be fixed, however, with an appropriate normalization. Much more seriously, we have not compared and verified these “conditional probabilities” against the experimental data. In the next subsection, we shall carry this out rigorously.

2.6 Maximum Entropy Modeling

Our objective is to find a model for the probabilities p(σ^(v)|σ^(a)), σ^(v)ε S^(v), σ^(a)ε S^(a) that we may use in, for instance, the maximum likelihood approach and equation (11). We shall accomplish this in steps, starting in this subsection and then continuing in the next.

Here is the setup for the more rigorous modeling we are going to consider. We let S^(v) be the space of labels (of valid signatures) and S^(a) the space of unlabeled examples (of all possible signatures).

To establish an appropriate model, we use a training set (σ_(l) ^(a), σ_(l) ^(v)), l=1, . . . , L. To ensure consistency between the observations provided through the training set and the model, we use the expectations of certain features φ_(i), i=0, . . . , I. We let E_({tilde over (π)})[φ_(i)] represent the expectation of feature φ_(i) in the training data and E_(π)[φ_(i)] be the expectation with respect to the model π being estimated. Here {tilde over (π)} is the observed, empirical distribution over S^(a)×S^(v), and π=π(σ^(v)|σ^(a)) is a model distribution over S^(a)×S^(v). Specifically,

$\begin{matrix} {{E_{\overset{\sim}{\pi}}\left\lbrack \phi_{j} \right\rbrack} = {{\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}}{{\overset{\sim}{\pi}\left( {\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}{\phi_{j}\left( {\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}}} = {\frac{1}{L}{\sum\limits_{l = 1}^{L}{\phi_{j}\left( {\sigma_{l}^{\alpha},\sigma_{l}^{\upsilon}} \right)}}}}} & (36) \\ {{E_{\pi}\left\lbrack \phi_{j} \right\rbrack} = {{\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\alpha}}{{\overset{\sim}{\pi}\left( \sigma^{\alpha} \right)}{\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\upsilon}}{{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}{\phi_{j}\left( {\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}}}}} = {\frac{1}{L}{\sum\limits_{l = 1}^{L}{\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\upsilon}}{{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma_{l}^{\alpha}} \right)}{\phi_{j}\left( {\sigma_{l}^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}}}}}}} & (37) \end{matrix}$

To find the model π(σ^(v)|σ^(a)), σ^(a), σ^(v)ε S^(a)×S^(v), we use a maximum entropy approach; cf. [8], [42], [35]. We let H be the average (conditional) entropy given by

$\begin{matrix} {{H\left( {\pi\left( {\cdot {,\sigma^{\alpha}}} \right)} \right)} = {\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\upsilon}}{{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}\ln\frac{1}{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}}}} & (38) \end{matrix}$

We then look for the solution {circumflex over (π)}(σ^(v)|σ^(a)) of the following constrained maximization problem; cf. [37], [8].

$\begin{matrix} {{{maximize}_{\pi}\mspace{14mu}{\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\alpha}}{{\overset{\sim}{\pi}\left( \sigma^{\alpha} \right)}{H\left( {\pi\left( {\cdot {,\sigma^{\alpha}}} \right)} \right)}}}}{{{subject}\mspace{14mu}{to}\mspace{14mu}{E_{\overset{\sim}{\pi}}\left\lbrack \phi_{j} \right\rbrack}} = {{E_{\pi}\left\lbrack \phi_{j} \right\rbrack}{\forall j}}}{{{\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\upsilon}}{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}} = 1},{\forall\sigma^{\alpha}}}{{{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)} \geq 0},{\forall\sigma^{\upsilon}},\sigma^{\alpha}}} & (39) \end{matrix}$

Using Lagrange multipliers, we find that the solution to this constrained maximization problem is of the form

$\begin{matrix} {{{\pi_{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)} = {\frac{1}{Z\left( \sigma^{\alpha} \right)}{\exp\left( {\sum\limits_{i = 0}^{I}{\lambda_{i}{\phi_{i}\left( {\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}}} \right)}}},{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda} = \left\{ \lambda_{i} \right\}_{i = 0}^{I}},} & (40) \end{matrix}$ where Z(σ^(a))=Z_({right arrow over (λ)})(σ^(a)) is the so-called partition function

$\begin{matrix} {{Z\left( \sigma^{\alpha} \right)} = {\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\upsilon}}{{\exp\left( {\sum\limits_{i = 0}^{I}{\lambda_{i}{\phi_{i}\left( {\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}}} \right)}.}}} & (41) \end{matrix}$ In other words, the solution to the maximization problem belongs to a family of loglinear models parameterized by the vector {right arrow over (λ)} of constants.

The dual objective function

({right arrow over (λ)}) associated with (39) is given by

$\begin{matrix} {{\mathcal{L}\left( \overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda} \right)} = {\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}}{{\overset{\sim}{\pi}\left( {\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}\ln\frac{1}{\pi_{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}\left( {\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}}}} & (42) \\ {= {\frac{1}{L}\left( {{\sum\limits_{l = 1}^{L}{\sum\limits_{i = 0}^{I}{\lambda_{i}{\phi_{i}\left( {\sigma_{l}^{\alpha},\sigma_{l}^{\upsilon}} \right)}}}} - {\sum\limits_{l = 1}^{L}{\ln{\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\upsilon}}{\exp\left( {\sum\limits_{j = 0}^{I}{\lambda_{j}{\phi_{j}\left( {\sigma_{l}^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}}} \right)}}}}} \right)}} & (43) \end{matrix}$ (see [56], pp. 6-7 for details).

Solving the maximum entropy problem (39) is then equivalent to maximizing the dual objective function

({right arrow over (λ)}) to find the optimal {right arrow over (λ)}: {right arrow over (λ)}_(*) =argmax_({right arrow over (λ)})

({right arrow over (λ)}).  (44) Once we obtain this vector, then the solution to (39) is the probability distribution π_({right arrow over (λ)}*)(σ^(v)|σ^(a)), cf. (40).

We also remark that the maximization of the dual objective function is equivalent to the maximization of the log-likelihood function

$\begin{matrix} {{{{LL}\left( \overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda} \right)} = {\ln{\prod\limits_{\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}}{\pi_{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}^{\overset{\sim}{\pi}{({\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}})}}}}};} & (45) \end{matrix}$ (see [8], p. 47, for details).

To solve (44) and hence find the optimal {right arrow over (λ)}_(*), we may use standard iterative techniques. In [41], there is a comparison of different numerical methods for maximum entropy problems. Typically, the partial derivatives of

({right arrow over (λ)}) are needed. These are given by

$\begin{matrix} {\frac{\partial\mathcal{L}}{\partial\lambda_{i}} = {{E_{\overset{\sim}{\pi}}\left\lbrack \phi_{i} \right\rbrack} - {E_{\pi_{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}}\left\lbrack \phi_{i} \right\rbrack}}} & (46) \\ {\mspace{45mu}{= {\frac{1}{L}{\sum\limits_{l = 1}^{L}\left( {{\phi_{i}\left( {\sigma_{l}^{\alpha},\sigma_{l}^{\upsilon}} \right)} - {\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\upsilon}}{{\pi_{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma_{l}^{\alpha}} \right)}{\phi_{i}\left( {\sigma_{l}^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}}}} \right)}}}} & (47) \\ {\mspace{45mu}{= {\frac{1}{L}{\sum\limits_{l = 1}^{L}\left( {{{\phi_{i}\left( {\sigma_{l}^{\alpha},\sigma_{l}^{\upsilon}} \right)} - {E_{\pi_{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}{({{\cdot \text{❘}}\sigma_{l}^{\alpha}})}}\left( {\phi_{i}\left( {\sigma_{l}^{\alpha}, \cdot} \right)} \right)}},\mspace{14mu}{i = 0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},{I.}} \right.}}}} & (48) \end{matrix}$ It is also interesting to note that the second derivatives are given by the covariance matrix of the features:

$\begin{matrix} {\frac{\partial^{2}\mathcal{L}}{{\partial\lambda_{j}}\lambda_{k}} = {- {\sum\limits_{l = 1}^{L}{{cov}_{\pi_{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}{({{\cdot \text{❘}}\sigma_{l}^{\alpha}})}}\left( {{\phi_{j}\left( {\sigma_{l}^{\alpha}, \cdot} \right)},{\phi_{k}\left( {\sigma_{l}^{\alpha}, \cdot} \right)}} \right)}}}} & (49) \end{matrix}$

Before applying the maximum entropy modelling to our current situation, we make the following remark. Note that by replacing φ_(i)(σ^(a), σ^(v)) by −φ_(i)(σ^(a), σ^(v)), we may always assume that the λ*_(i)≦0, i=0, . . . , I. For any {right arrow over (λ)}≦0 (i.e., λ_(i)≦0 for each i=0, . . . , I), we define the generalized edit distance ed associated with the features {right arrow over (φ)}(σ^(a), σ^(v)) by

$\begin{matrix} {{{ed}\left( {\sigma^{\alpha},{\sigma^{\upsilon};\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}} \right)} = {- {\sum\limits_{i = 0}^{I}{\lambda_{i}{{\phi_{i}\left( {\sigma^{\alpha},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}.}}}}} & (50) \end{matrix}$ (We let the associated cost functions {right arrow over (c)} be defined by {right arrow over (c)}=−{right arrow over (λ)}.) The conditional probabilities may then be written as

$\begin{matrix} {{\pi_{{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}_{*}}\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \middle| \sigma^{a} \right)} = {\frac{1}{Z\left( \sigma^{a} \right)}{{\exp\left( {- {{ed}\left( {\sigma^{a},{\sigma^{\upsilon};{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}_{*}}} \right)}} \right)}.}}} & (51) \end{matrix}$

The maximum entropy approach is quite general in nature. To apply it to our particular situation, we need to define a set of features. We shall base these features on the edit distance ed(σ^(A), σ^(B), {right arrow over (c)}) for some given cost functions {right arrow over (c)}={c_(i)}_(i=0) ⁴. We let φ_(i)(σ^(v),σ^(a))=#T _(i) , i=0, . . . , 4,  (52) where #T_(i) denotes the number of occurrences of the ith transformation T_(i) in the (optimal) calculation of the edit distance ed(σ^(a), σ^(v), {right arrow over (c)}. These features φ_(i)(σ^(v), σ^(a)) obviously may depend on the particular choice of the cost functions {right arrow over (c)}.

Suppose then that we have obtained the solution {right arrow over (λ)}_(*)={λ*_(i)}_(i=0) ³ and let Λ*_(i)=exp λ*_(i).  (53) According to (40), the corresponding model probabilities are given by

$\begin{matrix} {{{\pi_{{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}_{*}}\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \middle| \sigma^{a} \right)} = {\frac{1}{Z\left( \sigma^{a} \right)}{\exp\left( {\sum\limits_{i = 0}^{4}{\lambda_{i}^{*}{\phi_{i}\left( {\sigma^{a},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}}} \right)}}},} & (54) \\ {\mspace{124mu}{= {\frac{1}{Z\left( \sigma^{a} \right)}{\prod\limits_{i = 0}^{4}\left( \Lambda_{i}^{*} \right)^{\phi_{i}{({\sigma^{a},\sigma^{\upsilon}})}}}}}} & (55) \\ \; & (56) \end{matrix}$

Notice that at least for these features given by (52), our notations here are somewhat misleading: We have defined the φ_(i):s with respect to an edit distance with a starting cost function {right arrow over (c)}. We then obtain a new (generalized) edit distance via the equation (50), associated with the optimal {right arrow over (λ)}_(*). This new edit distance now potentially results in different choices of the number of elementary transformations #T_(i)=#T_(i)(σ^(a), σ^(v)) and a new optimal {right arrow over (λ)}_(*). And this can then be repeated forever unless the iteration process converges (i.e., the numbers #T_(i) stabilize from iteration to iteration).

We also experimented with a “normalized” set of features

$\begin{matrix} {\phi_{i} = {{\phi_{i}\left( {\sigma^{a},\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)} = {\frac{\#\; T_{i}}{\sum\limits_{j = 0}^{I}{\#\; T_{j}}}.}}} & (57) \end{matrix}$

The edit distance, with the appropriate cost functions, provides a coarse model of a user's typing and errors. By introducing more transforms, this model can be refined. For example, we have seen in the Subsection 2.4 that certain insertions and deletions are particularly common. Hence, we may introduce insertion and deletion transforms depending on neighboring characters.

EXAMPLE 2.3

Based on several users' typing errors, it seems that the following transforms may provide a better explanation of their typing than the standard set:

-   -   in₂₂ insertion of extra 2     -   in₈₈ insertion of extra 8     -   in_(ss) insertion of extra symbol after same symbol (where         symbol is not 2 or 8)     -   in_(s) insertion of symbol without resulting duplication     -   de₂₂ deletion of extra 2     -   de₈₈ deletion of extra 8     -   de_(ss) deletion of extra symbol in a duplication (where symbol         is not 2 or 8)     -   de_(s) deletion of symbol not from a duplication         Transposition tr, identity id, and substition su as before.         2.7 The Resulting Bayesian Model

Let us now see how we can establish a model that we can use in equations (11) and (13) in Subsection 2.2. First, we observe that the maximum entropy models from the previous Subsection are not exactly what we need. The reason is the following.

The probability distributions p_({right arrow over (λ)})(σ^(v)|σ^(a)) we obtained are defined in terms of the appropriate edit distance in such a way that if two signatures σ₁ ^(v) and σ₂ ^(v) have the same edit distance from the typed σ^(a), then p_({right arrow over (λ)})(σ^(v) ¹ |σ^(a))=p_({right arrow over (λ)})(σ^(v) ² |σ^(a)). If one of these two intended signatures σ_(i) ^(v), i=1, 2, is much more common than the other, then it seems that we should favor this signature instead of the other in, say, (11). But clearly our model distributions p_({right arrow over (λ)})(σ^(v) ¹ |σ^(a)) will not form the basis for such assessments, at least not directly, since they only depend on the edit distance. (And this, of course, also means that the analysis in an example like Example 2.1 is out of reach.)

We can of course go back to the maximum entropy models and instead model p_({right arrow over (λ)})(σ^(a)|σ^(v)) using those techniques. If we do that in a straightforward manner, we are likely to end up with a partition function Z that depends on v, Z(v). This is problematic from a complexity point of view since it is expensive to calculate it, and it does not vanish when we want to compare several different v:s.

Another possibility is to introduce more constraints in the basic maximization (39). For example, we may add a constraint for each σ^(v) so that we guarantee through this constraint that the probability (obtained from a standard corpus perhaps) of each σ^(v) ends up being the right one. The calculations necessary for this do not appear to be easy, or at least from a complexity point of view it does not seem that they can be used in our setting.

A third possibility is to introduce more features into the definition of the edit distance so that the modified edit distance becomes more sensitive. With carefully chosen features, it may be possible to make the edit distance reflect the probability of the different σ^(v). If we succeed in that, then on the other hand the modified edit distance probably will not accurately reflect the user's typing patterns.

The problems we are encountering here are due to the fact that we are mixing the impact from two different sources on our data. On one hand, we have the user's intended distribution of character combinations; and then, on the other hand, we have his typing and typing errors, cf. FIG. 3.

To sort this out, let us consider the input process as consisting of two parts: one process corresponding to units of characters σ^(v) (like signatures corresponding to words) followed by another process corresponding to the user's typing and outputting a σ^(a) for each σ^(v). Let us for simplicity also assume that the first of these processes is 0th order and can be described by the distribution of the σ^(v):s and that the second outputs a σ^(a) according to another distribution after each σ^(v). (Neither of these assumptions is really necessary, but they make the discussion simpler.) In other words, suppose the user's context of character combinations is described by the probability distribution P(σ^(v)), σ^(v)ε S^(v) (for instance, P may be the probabilities of words in a big corpus), and that there are probability distributions π(σ^(a)|σ^(v)) for the data entered σ^(a)ε S^(a) given each intended σ^(v)ε S^(v). Together these distributions determine a joint distribution p(σ^(v), σ^(a)) on S^(v)×S^(a) defined by p(σ^(v),σ^(a))=P(σ^(v))π(σ^(a)|σ^(v)), σ^(v) εS ^(v),σ^(a) εS ^(a).  (58) So, p(σ^(v), σ^(a)) describes the probability that σ^(v) is the intended signature when σ^(a) is entered. This is then the basic description of the combined input system. We remark that we are thus led to a description that follows a path widely used in image analysis and pattern recognition to handle prior knowledge and empirical data, see [27], [61], [28].

Both P(σ^(v)) and the family π(σ^(a)|σ^(v)) may easily be recovered from the joint distribution p(σ^(v), σ^(a)) To see this, we note that we clearly have

$\begin{matrix} {{P\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)} = {\sum\limits_{\sigma^{a}}{{p\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon},\sigma^{a}} \right)}.}}} & (59) \end{matrix}$ Further, by using the definition of conditional probability and the definition (58), we see that

$\begin{matrix} \begin{matrix} {{p\left( \sigma^{a} \middle| \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)} = \frac{p\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon},\sigma^{a}} \right)}{P\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}} \\ {= \frac{{P\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}{\pi\left( \sigma^{a} \middle| \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}}{P\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}} \\ {= {{\pi\left( \sigma^{a} \middle| \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}.}} \end{matrix} & (60) \end{matrix}$ Hence, we may recover π(σ^(a)|σ^(v)) by first obtaining P from the joint distribution and then use the joint distribution again to get p(σ^(a)|σ^(v)). This also tells us that the conditional probabilities p(σ^(a)|σ^(v)) of the combined input system only depend on the conditional probabilities describing the user's typing and have nothing to do with the distribution of the intended signatures σ^(v).

We introduce the notation Q(σ^(a)), σ^(a)ε S^(a), for the other marginal distribution associated with the joint distribution p(σ^(v), σ^(a)):

$\begin{matrix} {{{Q\left( \sigma^{a} \right)} = {{\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\upsilon} \in S^{\upsilon}}{p\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon},\sigma^{a}} \right)}} = {\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\upsilon} \in S^{\upsilon}}{{P\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}{\pi\left( \sigma^{a} \middle| \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}}}}},\mspace{14mu}{\sigma^{a} \in {S^{a}.}}} & (61) \end{matrix}$

Assume now that we are given the typed σ^(a) and are asking for the distribution of the σ^(v):s. Once again, simply by using the definition of conditional probability we get

$\begin{matrix} \begin{matrix} {{p\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \middle| \sigma^{a} \right)} = \frac{p\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon},\sigma^{a}} \right)}{p\left( {{\sigma^{\upsilon} \in S^{\upsilon}},\sigma^{a}} \right)}} \\ {{= \frac{{P\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}{\pi\left( \sigma^{a} \middle| \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}}{Q\left( \sigma^{a} \right)}},} \end{matrix} & (62) \end{matrix}$ where we of course assume that the denominator Q(σ^(a)) does not vanish. One way to interpret this relationship is like this: We started with a distribution P(σ^(v)) of the signatures σ^(v)ε S^(v). Once we obtain the σ^(a), then this distribution is adjusted and modified by the factor

$\frac{\pi\left( \sigma^{a} \middle| \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}{Q\left( \sigma^{a} \right)}.$ We refer to P(σ^(v)) as the prior distribution and p(σ^(v)|σ^(a)) as the posterior distribution of σ^(v) given σ^(a).

Note that to describe the joint distribution p(σ^(v), σ^(a)) and the input process, we only need the “transition” probability distributions π(•|σ^(v)) as far as the typing goes. Sometimes it will be convenient to have access to a joint distribution, so we shall go ahead and define π(σ^(v), σ^(a)) on S^(v)×S^(a). We let

$\begin{matrix} {{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon},\sigma^{a}} \right)} = \frac{\pi\left( \sigma^{a} \middle| \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}{\#\; S^{\upsilon}}} & (63) \end{matrix}$ where #S^(v) is the number of signatures in S^(v) (which we assume is finite). We then have two corresponding marginal distributions:

$\begin{matrix} {{{{\Pi\left( \sigma^{a} \right)} = {{\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\upsilon} \in S^{\upsilon}}{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon},\sigma^{a}} \right)}} = {\frac{1}{\#\; S^{\upsilon}}{\sum\limits_{\sigma^{\upsilon} \in S^{\upsilon}}{\pi\left( \sigma^{a} \middle| \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}}}}},\mspace{14mu}{\sigma^{a} \in S^{a}}}{and}} & (64) \\ {{{\Omega\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)} = \frac{1}{\#\; S^{\upsilon}}},{\sigma^{\upsilon} \in {S^{\upsilon}.}}} & (65) \end{matrix}$ (Equivalently, we may have defined π(σ^(v), σ^(a)) by first picking the uniform distribution Ω(σ^(v)), S^(v), and then requiring π(σ^(v), σ^(a))=Ω(σ^(v))π(σ^(a)|σ^(v)).)

For our purposes, we typically want to compare different σ^(v):s given the same user input σ^(a). With this in mind, we observe that by (60) and (62)

$\begin{matrix} {\frac{p\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{1}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}{p\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{2}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)} = {\frac{P\left( \sigma^{\upsilon_{1}} \right)}{P\left( \sigma^{\upsilon_{2}} \right)}{\frac{p\left( {\sigma^{\alpha}\text{❘}\sigma^{\upsilon_{1}}} \right)}{p\left( {\sigma^{\alpha}\text{❘}\sigma^{\upsilon_{2}}} \right)}.}}} & (66) \end{matrix}$ Similarly, using the definition (63),

$\begin{matrix} {\frac{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{1}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{2}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)} = {\frac{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\alpha}\text{❘}\sigma^{\upsilon_{1}}} \right)}{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\alpha}\text{❘}\sigma^{\upsilon_{2}}} \right)}.}} & (67) \end{matrix}$ Combining these equations (66) and (67) and once again using (60), we find that

$\begin{matrix} {\frac{p\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{1}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}{p\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{2}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)} = {\frac{P\left( \sigma^{\upsilon_{1}} \right)}{P\left( \sigma^{\upsilon_{2}} \right)}{\frac{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{1}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{2}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}.}}} & (68) \end{matrix}$

So if we model P(σ^(v)) and π(σ^(a)|σ^(v)), then through (58) we obtain a corresponding model for the joint distribution p(σ^(v), σ^(a)). In particular, let us use the maximum entropy model π_({right arrow over (λ)}) _(*) (σ^(v)|σ^(a)) from the previous subsection to model π(σ^(v)|σ^(a)). Let us also use some reasonable approximation P₀(σ^(v)) of the distribution P(σ^(v)) (for instance, the probabilities generated from a large corpus of some kind). Then we obtain a corresponding model p _({right arrow over (λ)}) _(*) (σ^(v),σ^(a))=P ₀(σ^(v))π_({right arrow over (λ)}) _(*) (σ^(a)|σ^(v)), σ^(v) εS ^(v),σ^(a) εS ^(a).  (69) For this model, the various identities above are valid. For example, equation (68) now reads

$\begin{matrix} {\frac{p_{{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}_{*}}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{1}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}{p_{{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}_{*}}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{2}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)} = {\frac{P_{0}\left( \sigma^{\upsilon_{1}} \right)}{P_{0}\left( \sigma^{\upsilon_{2}} \right)}{\frac{\pi_{{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}_{*}}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{1}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}{\pi_{{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}_{*}}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{2}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}.}}} & (70) \end{matrix}$ Using the explicit description of π_({right arrow over (λ)}) _(*) given by (51), we may equivalently write

$\begin{matrix} {\frac{p_{{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}_{*}}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{1}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)}{p_{{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}_{*}}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon_{2}}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)} = {\frac{P_{0}\left( \sigma^{\upsilon_{1}} \right)}{P_{0}\left( \sigma^{\upsilon_{2}} \right)}{{\exp\left( {{{ed}\left( {\sigma^{\alpha},{\sigma^{\upsilon_{2}};{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}_{*}}} \right)} - {{ed}\left( {\sigma^{\alpha},{\sigma^{\upsilon_{1}};{\overset{\rightarrow}{\lambda}}_{*}}} \right)}} \right)}.}}} & (71) \end{matrix}$ 2.8 Another Typing Model

Let us once again go back to the basic model (58). With it, we are treating the typing model for a user (or set of users) as “noise” on top of the exact entry of the intended units of characters (“words”). To establish such a typing model, we have used maximum entropy modeling. The equation (35) can also serve as inspiration for another approach, and this is what we shall go through in this subsection.

One possibility is to view the typed characters as outcomes of an appropriate stochastic process. For example, if the typed character coincides with that of the intended signature, then we may record that as “no error”; and if an error occurs, we may characterize this by recording what transform is required to adjust the intended keystroke to coincide with the typed one. For the error/no-error process, we may then use a Poisson-type process, and, in addition, use a separate distribution to characterize the possible outcomes when an error occurs; cf. [31]. This is similar to what we shall study here.

Let us consider a fixed unit σ^(v) of intended character combinations (a “word”) with individual characters σ_(n) ^(v): σ^(v)=σ₁ ^(v) . . . σ_(N−1) ^(v),  (72) where N=#σ^(v) is the length of σ^(v). (We note that we are using a left-to-right ordering, but the particular ordering is not important.) Each unit σ^(v) is input by the user, resulting in the signature σ^(a) with characters σ_(m) ^(a): σ^(a)=σ₁ ^(a) . . . σ_(M−1) ^(a),  (73) where M=#σ^(a). It will be convenient to set σ_(n) ^(v)=b, n≦0  (74) σ_(n) ^(v)=e, n≧N,  (75) and, similarly, σ_(m) ^(a)=b, m≦0  (76) σ_(m) ^(a)=e, m≧M  (77) (78) to take care of the beginning and the end of these units. The typing model we shall study here uses a sequence of transforms T==T(σ^(v), σ^(a))={T_(k)} to explain the typed entries σ^(a) given the intended ones σ^(v). Each transform acts on a set of characters in the intended signature and outputs some characters in the typed signature, and the transforms are ordered sequentially, just as the input process, so we shall also write T= . . . T ⁻¹ T ₀ T ₁  (79) as well as Tσ^(v)=σ^(a).  (80) Each of the transforms T_(k) acts on a character σ_(n) _(k) ^(v) and outputs either the empty character or a character in σ^(a). The idea is to choose the transforms so that the probability Prob(T) becomes an approximation of the typing model π(σ^(a)|σ^(v)).

Let us illustrate the procedure in terms of the family of five basic transforms (including the identity) used for the standard edit distance {id, in, de, su, tr}, cf. Subsection 2.3 as well as Example 2.3 in Subsection 2.6. We shall view each of the transforms T_(k) as being chosen independently from the family of transforms {id, in, de, su, tr} and assume that the particular transform is drawn from the family of transforms with a probability that only depends on the current position that the transform is acting upon, the position before the current position (for a first-order model), what particular transform that is picked, and what output symbol it must generate to match the typed signature. So, the action of each transform T_(k) can be completely characterized by the character curr=σ_(i) _(k) ^(v) at the current position, the previous character prev=σ_(i) _(k−1) ^(v), the type type of the transform, and the output character out. So, we may in general describe T_(k) by the input-output relationship (prev, curr)→(type, out). We note that sometimes a different choice of relevant context (here the position before the current one) is more appropriate. For example, a user inserting an extra “s” onto nouns is probably quite common. In that case, a better context for the insertion transform may be the character after the current position so that the end of the unit will be recognized.

EXAMPLE 2.4

Suppose the intended signature is σ^(v)=1234 and the typed signature is σ^(a)=5512334. A reasonable guess as to what happened during the user's input process is given by the sequence of transforms T={in, in, id, id, id, in, id}. In more detail, we have the following sequence of transforms: (b,b)→(in,5)→(b,b)→(in,5)→(b,1)→(id,1)(1,2)→(id,2) (2,3)→(id,3)(2,3)→(in,3)(3,4)→(id,4).  (81) Similarly, let us assume the intended signature is σ^(v)=12234 and the typed signature is σ^(a)=1243. Then the typos may possibly be explained by the sequence T={id, id, de, id, tr}, or, more precisely, by the sequence (b,1)→(id,1)(1,2)→(id,2)(2,2)→(de,ε) (2,3)→(id,3)(3,4)→(tr,(4,3)).  (82) (Obviously, there is redundancy in the notation here; for example, the transpose of (3,4) is clearly known without specifying (4, 3).)

Once we have the sequence of transforms in place or, equivalently, the input-output relationships, and if the transforms are picked independently with probabilities depending on the two input parameters, then the following is a reasonable approximation of a typing model:

$\begin{matrix} {{{\pi\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)} \approx {\prod\limits_{k}{{Prob}\left( T_{k} \right)}}} = {\prod\limits_{k}{{{Prob}\left( \left( {{prev}_{k},{curr}_{k}} \right)\rightarrow\left( {{type}_{k},{out}_{k}} \right) \right)}.}}} & (83) \end{matrix}$ The transition probabilities Prob((prev_(k), curr_(k))→(type_(k), out_(k))) can be estimated from sample data (for a given user or a set of users). Since each of the labels (prev, curr) and (type, out) only take finitely many values, it is convenient to collect all these probabilities in a transition matrix with, say, a row corresponding to a specific input label (prev, curr) and each column to a specific output label (type, out).

Let us make two comments related to the estimation of this transition matrix. In our example with the small set of basic transforms, there are not very many entries in the matrix, and still there may be entries that are very infrequently visited as the user types. This sparsity of data makes it harder to obtain reliable estimates for some of the entries. There are many techniques for other applications that have been developed to address this (cf. [35], [32], [42]). For example, sometimes we may omit the dependency on the prev label and collect all the samples corresponding to a certain curr, type, out in a larger bin, and then assume that the distribution over the prev label is uniform (so called “back-off” from a first order model to a 0:th one). More generally, we may define other equivalence classes of labels that we expect to behave similarly as far as typing error, and then distribute the frequency counts evenly over the equivalence class.

The other comment relates to finding the appropriate transform sequences. Since the typing model is intended to explain the typical typing process, including common errors, the transform sequence should reflect these explanations. The assignment of the appropriate transforms to obtain the approximation of the transition matrix from samples at first seems to require a careful, case-by-case choice; however, it turns out that the transforms obtained from the calculation of the edit distance in most instances work quite well and few special cases need “hand-coding.”

2.9 Reducing Search Complexity

The edit distance can be calculated very quickly even for general cost functions and larger sets of basic transforms. For instance, we do not need to calculate the entire cost matrix E(i, j) in the dynamic programming approach (26). In Subsection 2.4, we have mentioned that by making the assumption that a certain number of the initial characters are entered correctly, we obtain a significant reduction in complexity. In addition, there are several well-known techniques to reduce the complexity of the distance calculation. Suppose, for example, that we are only interested in edit distances smaller than a certain value. Then we may stop the calculation when we get too far off the diagonal in the cost matrix since we know that the cost will only increase after that. There are techniques for carrying out the distance calculations in parallel. We refer to [34] and [47] for recent references and related approaches (the trick to only consider elements in the cost matrix close to the diagonal goes back to [40], [60]).

Our goal in this Subsection is to find techniques that allow us to expand the collection of possible typing errors that we may consider within a reasonable response time. The assumption that the first four characters are correctly entered is often much too restrictive. For example, in Table 3 we have collected the probability of up to the first four characters being typed correctly for signatures of length at least 5 that contain errors. This data relies on statistics from eight users as they typed about 6,800 words.

There are at least two basic approaches to reduce the search complexity to quickly find the potential signatures we need to consider. The first approach is to improve how we predict the signature that the user probably had intended. The second approach is to find a better indexing structure for the dictionary. In [6], [7], and [17] the indexing is based on the metric structure of the edit distance.

The exact typing model of a user depends on the system within which the typing

TABLE 3 The error probability for the initial characters among errors by three users for character combinations of length 5 and more. First i characters correct User 1 prob. % User 2 prob. % User 3 prob. % 1 95.2 91.9 98.6 2 85.7 83.2 89.9 3 78.6 63.4 77.0 4 61.9 41.0 60.4 occurs. In other words, the capabilities of the typing environment will impact the user's typing habits. As we mentioned earlier, it is probably particularly important for the user if longer words do not have to be retyped or edited. On the other hand, shorter words are typically more frequent, and it is easier to erase a few characters and to keep track of what has already been entered, etc. Hence, we may expect that an accurate typing model will distinguish between different lengths of signatures entered.

To approximate this difference in the dependence of the user's experience and typing model on the length of the signatures entered, we shall separate signatures of length, say, four or less, from those longer than four.

For character combinations that are four characters long or less, it is more feasible to obtain an approximation of the typing model directly from experimental data. For now, we shall simply incorporate a few specific transforms for these combinations. For example, from our experimental data it seems that transpositions at the end of combinations are particularly common. For these shorter combinations, it is also easier to establish a look-up table for combinations that are particularly prone to certain errors and then list the appropriate corrections for these.

Here we shall now focus on character combinations that are at least five characters long. There are several considerations to keep in mind: response time, storage, typing order, user characteristics, etc. In order to reduce search time, we may use different prediction techniques, taking into account the particular data structure of the stored information. These predictions may use a number of features. For example, the approximate length of a character combination seems to be quite stable under the entry process. With a storage premium, we may also add word endings and other shorter combinations.

The following will illustrate some of the issues involved. If we assume that the four initial characters are correct, then we have significantly narrowed down the number of potential signatures we have to consider. However, as we have seen in Table 3, this assumption is quite restrictive and removes a significant portion of the intended signatures. We can improve the situation by relaxing the assumption and only assume that the first three characters are correct. To avoid increasing the search space too much, we can then use these three to predict a fourth character and let these predicted four-character combinations form the basis for our search of potential, additional alternatives to present to the user. (These are in addition to the alternatives obtained using the default assumption that all four are correct.) One such prediction method is to use the maximum likelihood prediction for the fourth entry based on the probability of all legal combinations of length four with the given, initial three characters. These predictions can be established off line and stored in a small table for quick retrieval.

We may also add different models for the typing to improve the prediction accuracy. For example, as we mentioned in Subsection 2.6 (see Example 2.3) it is easy to type too few of the character 8 on the ORK, and hence it makes sense to incorporate these types of facts when predicting likely errors and intended entries.

To illustrate this, let us consider the ORK as the entry device and let us further make the assumption that only the first two out of the initial four characters are correct, and that we want to use all four characters for our initial search of likely alternatives (as before). Hence, this leaves us with having to predict the two remaining characters. So, there are potentially one hundred possibilities for each one of the ten thousand possible initial σ^(a):s with four characters (since we are assuming that the first two characters are correct). So, if we decide to use a maximum likelihood approach, we are interested in ordering the probabilities Prob(σ^(v)|σ^(a)) for each one of the σ^(a):s. The σ^(v):s we are considering here correspond to legal combinations of length four that are part of the character combinations of length at least five. Instead of experimentally estimating these, we go back to the basic Bayesian model (58) in Subsection 2.7. For the ordering, we may then use equation (68). The factor P(σ^(v)) can be estimated from sample data (like a large corpus or dynamically). This means that as soon as we have a typing model π(σ^(v)|σ^(a)), then we have the basis for selecting the most likely four combinations σ^(v):s for each fixed σ^(a).

In the next example, we shall compare the performance of the two approaches outlined above. The first uses the assumption that the first three characters entered are correct and then predicts three possible choices for the fourth character based on the frequency of occurrence derived from a standard corpus. The second uses the typing model described in Subsection 2.8. For this approach, we shall only assume that the first two characters are correct.

EXAMPLE 2.5

In this example, we shall compare the two prediction methods described above. For the first prediction method, we assume that the first three characters entered are correct. As a consequence, the highest percentages we can reach are 78.6%, 63.4/%, and 77.0% for the three users, cf. Table 3.

TABLE 4 The probability of having the first four characters among the top 2 and 3 alternatives, respectively, for the prediction method without typing model. (Using character combinations of length 5 and more.) Among i top alternatives User 1 prob. % User 2 prob. % User 3 prob. % 2 71.4 52.8 68.3 3 78.6 59.0 74.1 For the second prediction method, we only assume that the first two characters entered are correct. Hence, the highest percentages we can reach now are 87.7%, 81.3%, and 80.5% for the three users, cf. Table 3.

TABLE 5 The probability of having the first four characters among the top 2 and 3 alternatives, respectively, for the prediction method with typing model. (Using character combinations of length 5 and more.) Among i top alternatives User 1 prob. % User 2 prob. % User 3 prob. % 2 76.3 64.0 73.9 3 79.1 68.3 76.2 Let us also record the percentage of the error signatures whose first four or five characters are among the top 3 alternatives when we only assume that the first character is correct.

TABLE 6 The probability of having the first four or five characters among the top 3 alternatives, respectively, for the prediction method with typing model under the assumption the first character is correct. (Using character combinations of length 5 and more.) First j characters of top 3 alternatives Overall % of all errors 4 67.6 5 71.5

3 NLP-Based Considerations

3.1 The Substitution Test

To explain the basic underlying idea in this section, let us start by considering some groups of words with the same signature, see Table 7. With the objective of reducing the collisions, we observe that the words in each of the groups are often of very different in nature, some are nouns, some are verbs and adjectives, etc. This means that although they have the same signature, they often play different roles in building a sentence.

TABLE 7 Groups of words with the same signature and corresponding frequencies # Words Frequencies 1 to 2332410 go 59270 2 sixth 2128 sixty 1304 3 slang 174 slant 124 4 safe 6541 save 6209 wave 3407 ward 3323 ware 225 5 basis 13464 tasks 3598 taxis 284 basks 16 gawks 0 6 show 24459 snow 3263 7 signs 4724 sighs 203 8 sorry 6968 worry 4516 9 sold 7820 wood 6792 sole 2358 wold 83 sloe 7 10 now 108301 how 81957 nos 185 yow 77 hos 0

To further elaborate on this, let us consider a couple of sample sentences (in this case from Alice in Wonderland).

-   -   1. ‘I'm very sorry you've been annoyed,’ said Alice, who was         beginning to see its meaning.     -   2. How puzzling all these changes are!     -   3. Mind now!     -   4. So she set little creature down, and felt quite relieved to         see it trot away quietly into the wood.

If we substitute the word “sorry” with “worry”, the other word in the same collision group, then sentence 1 no longer makes sense. It is certainly grammatically incorrect. Similarly, in sentence 2, none of the other words in the same collision group work as a substitute for “now”; grammatically, the resulting sentence would be incorrect. Sentence 3 is a little more challenging: “how” can be substituted for “now” and we still have a meaningful sentence. Perhaps it is a little more unusual, but it is grammatically correct. In sentence 4, the word “wood” can be replaced by the noun “sole”, but not when this word is used as an adjective. Hence, in that case, we need to refine the frequency information about this particular word to incorporate the counts when the word is used a noun and when it is used as an adjective. So, after such a such a refinement, we have been able to reduce the number of colliding words of any real consequence to two (“wood” and “sole”), and we have also been able to adjust the probabilities to more accurately reflect the situation.

One way to consider the input of characters and the feedback is as a communication process between the user and the device. The device is attempting to extract the intended words and sentences. As the substitution test indicates, the meaning of the words and the sentence is an important component for the understanding of spoken, as well as written, language between two users, and it seems to be a potentially powerful mechanism to help determine the best choices of words with the same signature.

To find the exact meaning of a word and a sentence is difficult, since it is hard to even quantify the problem and the terms involved. The meaning of a word is, for example, highly context sensitive. In general, the problem of automatically extracting the meaning from words and sentences is related to a number of interesting and very active research areas in Natural Language Processing (NLP), cf. [49], [4], [42], [33], [21].

However, it is possible to carry out a substitution test, similar to the one above, in any sentence by inserting each of the words corresponding to a given signature and decide which ones can be discarded on grammatical and syntactical grounds. In this section, we discuss how such a substitution test can be automated and how it can be used to improve the user's experience using the One-Row Keyboard and similar reduced keyboards.

3.2 Some Statistics

Let us start by looking at some statistics related to the effectiveness of the input process, without the support of syntactical information or any other way of utilizing the meaning of the sentence being created. In Table 8 below, we have collected some statistics from the following texts:

-   Book 1 Alice in Wonderland (by Lewis Carroll) -   Book 2 Memoirs of Aaron Burr (by Matthew L. Davis) -   Book 3 Crime and Punishment (by Fyodor Dostojevsky) -   Book 4 Edison, his life and inventions (by Frank Lewis Dyer) -   Book 5 Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson -   Book 6 The Forgotten King (by Jonathan Dunn) -   Articles Sampling of articles from recent editions of Time

In particular, we notice that the signature is ambiguous for about 30% of the words, but that about 90% of those are in fact displayed correctly. This results in approximately 96-98% of all words being displayed correctly “the first time” on the display. (We have assumed that word initially displayed is simply the most probable word for a given signature, i.e., we have used the path-frequency ordering.)

So there are approximately 3% of words that are incorrectly displayed the first time they are displayed. Although this number seems to be quite low, it is helpful to keep in mind that the average number of words in a sentence is quite large. For example, in The Wall Street Journal corpus (cf. [54], [1], [43]), the average sentence length is approximately 23 words. Hence, if we were typing The Wall Street Journal with the One-Row Keyboard,

TABLE 8 Collision statistics for sample texts. Item Book 1 Book 2 Book 3 Book 4 Book 5 Book 6 Articles # words 26686 283057 207084 261462 94299 155997 17837 # collisions 7557 90685 66809 89011 28796 36268 3013 % collisions 28.3 32.0 32.3 34.0 30.5 23.2 16.9 % correct display 96.86 97.54 97.33 97.83 96.04 97.81 97.95 we would expect to have to change one word on the screen at least once in about 70% of the sentences (since 23×0.03≈0.7).

Let us then investigate a little further where the problems are originating. The ten most frequent collision groups account for about 60% of the collisions, and the 50 most frequent ones represent about 90%, cf. Table 9.

TABLE 9 The percentage of the collisions in the most frequently occuring collision groups. % of Collisions # most frequent groups Book 1 Book 2 Book 3 Book 4 Book 5 Book 6 Articles 10 65.1 52.6 58.6 66.1 54.7 52.7 63.5 25 83.7 74.7 77.0 78.7 70.4 72.3 83.2 50 94.5 86.3 88.6 86.2 80.6 84.2 93.7 100 99.8 94.2 95.5 92.5 89.0 93.1 100

As we noted, in most cases the right word is initially displayed on the screen. Hence, to measure the problematic collisions it is interesting to look at what signatures are the ones causing most of the incorrectly displayed words. Rather than doing that exactly, we have collected in Table 10 how much of the approximately 3% of the incorrectly displayed words we could avoid if we were able to correctly handle the two most frequent words in certain specific collision groups. These specific groups are selected based on the frequency of the first alternative. Assuming that we correctly resolve the two words in ten of the collision groups, we reduce the 3% to approximately 1.4%. And if we take care of 25 groups and the corresponding two words of the highest frequency in each of those, then as a result approximately 0.7% of the words are being incorrectly displayed. Assuming that the average sentence is about 23 words long, we would then expect to find only one incorrectly displayed word in one out of six or seven sentences (23×0.007=0.161).

TABLE 10 The effect of resolving the two most frequent words in specific sets of collision groups. % Correctly Displayed # groups fixed Book 1 Book 2 Book 3 Book 4 Book 5 Book 6 Articles 10 98.78 98.95 98.87 98.83 97.81 98.84 99.01 25 99.35 99.30 99.33 99.14 98.39 99.18 99.36 50 99.67 99.5 99.55 99.38 98.76 99.45 99.63 100 99.91 99.67 99.72 99.56 99.12 99.67 99.89

On the other hand, if we could resolve all the words in some specific collision groups, not just the two most frequent, then the effect would be slightly different. In that case, we should select the collision groups based on the total frequency of all the alternatives (thus not counting the frequency of the displayed words). This is what we have in Table 11, assuming that we display all the words in the specific collision groups exactly when they should be.

As we see, when we completely resolve ten collision groups, the collision probability goes down to approximately 1.2%. If we handle 50 groups perfectly, then only about 0.5% of the words would be incorrectly displayed. This means that on average only one word would be incorrect in a little more than nine sentences.

The words that make up these groups are quite consistent across the different sample texts. For example, in Table 12 are some of the details about the ten groups used in Table 11 for Book 1, Book 2, and Articles.

TABLE 11 The effect of resolving the entire group for a specific number of collision groups. % Correctly Displayed # groups fixed Book 1 Book 2 Book 3 Book 4 Book 5 Book 6 Articles 10 98.82 98.99 98.87 98.89 97.84 98.84 99.07 25 99.40 99.36 99.39 99.25 98.53 99.21 99.44 50 99.73 99.58 99.63 99.51 98.96 99.51 99.74 100 99.97 99.77 99.81 99.72 99.36 99.74 100

TABLE 12 The percent of the collisions in the most frequently occuring collisions groups for sample texts. Book 1 Book 2 Articles % of % of % of # Word Collisions # Word Collisions # Word Collisions 1 they 1.733 1 of 12.478 1 of 15.267 then 1.244 or 1.595 or 2.124 2 of 6.802 2 by 1.967 2 they 3.485 or 1.019 th 0.815 then 0.797 3 how 0.900 3 can 0.475 3 say 0.664 now 0.794 day 0.471 way 0.597 san 0.199 4 way 0.741 4 they 0.850 4 how 1.162 say 0.675 then 0.346 now 0.730 5 to 9.647 5 now 0.455 5 have 3.186 go 0.662 how 0.288 hard 0.498 yard 0.033 6 on 2.554 6 may 0.810 6 to 17.624 oh 0.595 man 0.214 go 0.465 jay 0.033 7 just 0.688 7 year 0.160 7 can 1.228 must 0.582 hear 0.120 day 0.365 near 0.087 8 have 1.059 8 c 0.223 8 good 0.398 hare 0.410 d 0.190 told 0.199 hard 0.106 e 0.009 gold 0.066 yard 0.013 bold 0.066 9 round 0.543 9 to 10.761 9 just 1.128 found 0.423 go 0.195 must 0.266 10 can 0.463 10 say 0.193 10 may 0.697 day 0.384 way 0.179 man 0.199 wan 0.001 jan 0.033 jay 0.033 3.3 Modeling the User—Device Interaction

The type of considerations involved in automating a substitution test fall in the area of NLP techniques, and for us a good starting point is to consider parsing methods. These methods automate and extend the diagramming of sentences learned in high school. By using grammar rules and Part-Of-Speech (POS) tags, like those in Table 13, they create trees, or more generally graphs, that allow us to understand the construction of sentences and to assess whether these are grammatically correct. Two of the basic, now standard parsing techniques are the so-called Earley parser and the CYK parser, cf. [4], [42], [38], [46]. There are many other parsers, including probabilistic parsers, cf. [29], [57], [36], [15][14].

TABLE 13 A standard POS tag set Tag Explanation Examples at0 article the, a, an, no, every nn0 noun time, way, people, man, head, day, house, aircraft, data, committee vb0 verb is, have, be, are, do, can, would, forget, send, live, return vbd past-tense-verb was, had, said, were, did, been, got, forgot, sent, lived, returned aj0 adjective other, good, new, different, old, little, nice, better, best rb0 adverb so, then, up, out, well, how, now, when, why pp0 object pronoun you, I, it, he, she, they, that, them pp$ possessive pronoun his, her, their, your, my, its, our, ours, theirs cd0 cardinal one, two, three, five, four, six, hundred ord ordinal first, last, next, second, third, fourth, twentieth cj0 conjunction and, but, that, or, if, as, when inj interjection oh, yeah, no, yes, ah, ooh, hello not negative particle not prp preposition of, in, to, for, with, on, at to0 infinitive marker to

Slightly lower down in the hierarchy of NLP methods are the so-called partial parsers and chunking algorithms, cf. [3], [2], [59]. Parsers like the one above aim at recovering complete, exact parses of the sentences. Partial parsing, on the other hand, only tries to recover syntactic information and may, for instance, just focus on noun phrases. Since general text is noisy and since it is hard to guarantee grammatical rules that cover all the constructions used in a text, partial parsing sacrifices completeness in favor of robustness.

The POS taggers restrict the ambition even further: they intend to simply put the right POS tags on the words in a sentence. So, rather than attempting to solve the very ambitious problem of language understanding and the like, taggers are simply designed to disambiguate between the different roles a given word plays in a sentence. As it turns out, this can be done with impressive accuracy. A state-of-the-art tagger achieves about 97% accuracy in this POS-tagging process. See [12], [11], [13], [48], [9], [5], [18], [52], [53], [25], [26].

The complexity of these three different types of NLP techniques reflects the ambitions of each: that of a standard (full) parser is proportional to n³, where n is the number of words in the sentence, and a POS tagger is linear in n. This indicates that parsers are probably better suited for offline, batch-type processing, while POS taggers are good candidates for streaming-type processing. Typically, the parsers generate a large set of possible parse trees, and even if a probabilistic parser is used and the probabilities are used to differentiate between these trees, this adds to complexity and memory requirements.

To start modeling the user-device interaction, it is instructive to consider the following (see (84) below) from [58].

-   -   The goal of POS tagging is to assign to each word in a sentence         the most appropriate so called morphosyntactic category. This         presumes first of all a predefined tag set which can contain         from 10 up to 1000 different tags. These could for example be         “VERB”, “NOUN”, ADJECTIVE”, etc., or they can be more detailed,         like “AUXILIARY VERB”, “TRANSITIVE VERB”, “VERB IN PRESENT         TENSE, THIRD PERSON SINGULAR” . . . . A tag set must form a         partition, in the sense that a certain word in a certain sense         can only be assigned exactly one tag . . . . A notorious         (English) example of a sentence where the POS tags disambiguate         the meaning is the following:         “Time flies like an arrow but fruit flies like a banana”,  (84)     -   which has the POS tag assignment: NOUN VERB PREP ART NOUN CONJ         ADJ NOUN VERB ART NOUN

The tagging of (84) then demonstrates how we may think of the word together with the tag as a simplified model for carrying the intended meaning of a word. In a written text, the reader has to decode the meaning through the context since the tag is “lost.” With speech, the model is different: the meaning of a word is carried through intonation, pauses, and other effects, and the word itself may not be communicated with absolute certainty.

Let us start by modeling the interaction between the user and the device as a basic communication system with an information source (the user) and an information sink (the device) connected via a communication channel of some kind, see FIG. 3. We further assume that the input is divided up into segments s (typically sentences) that are identified through some means (usually through a period) and that these segments in turn are formed by concatenating basic input units w (typically words). A sentence s with N words is then represented by s=w₀ w₁ . . . w_(N).  (85)

Now it seems to make sense to distinguish two types of processing: batch and on-the-fly.

In the batch-type, offline processing mode, there is only limited feedback as the units are entered; the user may at least to some extent just enter the input without completely fixing it as he goes. Hence, we may assume that some of the input is correct while other parts may not be quite right. In FIG. 3, this means that the feedback path may not be used very heavily. It also means that the device decoder can operate on the entire sentence or even the entire message in trying to resolve ambiguities and the meaning of the transmitted information.

For the on-the-fly, real-time processing, we assume that the user corrects each of the words and his input as he goes, before he continues to the next word. So, the feedback loop in FIG. 3 is more heavily used. For the device decoder, this means that it has access to the signature of an entered word (or other unit) as well as the previous words. The channel thus drops not just the meaning of the words that the user intended but also the dual signature of the current word.

Let us introduce some notation to make this more explicit and easier to refer to. Let us assume that we are given a sentence s. Then a word w in this sentence carries a certain meaning μ. We also write μ=(κ,λ)  (86) where κ is the tag of the word (as a member of s) and λ is whatever remains of μ. Exactly how to characterize λ or how to get to it will not be of any great concern to us. Note, however, that μ=μ(s). As before, we let σ and τ be the signature and dual signature, respectively, of w.

So, to model the communication processes as communication systems, we have the following. For regular written text, the user intends to communicate {w, μ} and the channel only transmits w. The meaning μ must be deduced from the context.

The POS automatic taggers start from a sentence s: s=w₀ . . . w_(N).  (87) The goal of the tagger is to find κ_(i) for each word w_(i) and obtain {w_(i), κ_(i), ∅}. As we mentioned before, a state-of-the-art tagger achieves 96-97% accuracy. In this sense, the sequence of words contains most of the information in the tags and the sequence {w_(i), κ_(i), ∅}.

In the case of a reduced keyboard, the user still wants to transmit {w, μ}={(σ, τ), (κ, λ)}, but the channel drops τ, κ, and λ, and only the signature σ makes it through. In the case of the on-the-fly processing, which is the most interesting case for us, the user is assumed to use the feedback loop to make sure that the device decoder has access to all the words prior to the current one. Hence, the decoder can access . . . w_(i−2)w_(i−1)σ_(i).  (88) The challenge is for the decoder to provide τ_(i) or, equivalently, w_(i). A possibility we shall consider here is to use a POS tagger (or really any NLP tool) to obtain . . . {w_(i−2),(κ_(i−2),∅)}; {w_(i−1),(κ_(i−1),∅)}, {(σ_(i), 0),(κ_(i),∅)},  (89) or the full . . . {w_(i−2),(κ_(i−2),∅)}; {w_(i−1),(κ_(i−1),∅)}, {(σ_(i),τ_(i)),(κ_(i),∅)}.  (90)

There are essentially two observations motivating this approach for finding the missing dual signatures (also called the disambiguation problem for a reduced keyboard).

To explain our first motivation, let us pick the One-Row Keyboard as a specific example and consider some examples of collision groups and the POS tags for the words inside the groups. We shall use a standard tag set (see Appendix A.1) and pick some collision groups that seem at least somewhat important, see Table 14. Now, it is interesting to note that for most groups, the tags for the different words within the group overlap very little. More specifically, the frequencies in the table indicate that if we are given a tag and the signature, then with a good probability we can pinpoint the word (and the dual signature).

TABLE 14 Groups of words with the same signature and corresponding frequencies # Words Tag Frequencies 1 to total 2560346 to0 1620850 prp 917579 avp-prp 15488 avp 6245 unc 182 av0 1 go total 90542 vvi 59772 vvb 28605 nn1 1462 nn1-vvb 381 unc 320 np0 2 2 they total 433475 pnp 433441 unc 34 ad0-av0 1 aj0 1 cjc 1 then total 160826 av0 160652 cjs 171 3 now total 137814 av0 137801 cjs 11 nn1 1 unc 1 how total 101517 avq 101508 unc 4 nn1 3 av0 1 np0 1 4 can total 236321 vm0 234386 nn1 1019 vvb 734 nn1-vvb 153 unc 13 vvi 9 aj0-nn1 3 aj0 2 np0 2 day total 62256 nn1 58863 np0 1812 nn1-np0 1576 unc 5 unc 5 5 went total 48338 vvd 48028 vvn 310 sent total 13715 vvn 6915 vvd-vvn 3594 vvd 3155 aj0-vvd 21 aj0-vvn 21 aj0 8 unc 1 6 of total 2941790 prf 2941444 prp 276 unc 28 av0 27 cjc 11 cjs 3 vhi 1 or total 370855 cjc 370808 unc 47 7 give total 45117 vvi 32016 vvb 12997 nn1-vvb 75 nn1 23 unc 3 np0 3 bird total 3955 nn1 3443 np0 356 nn1-np0 156 8 have total 473693 vhb 268490 vhi 205195 unc 6 vvb 1 vvi 1 hard total 22935 aj0 9890 av0 6652 aj0-av0 6383 unc 4 aj0-nn1 3 np0 3 yard total 3267 nn1 2600 np0 477 nn1-np0 190

To study this somewhat more systematically, we shall pick the top ten collision groups when we have ordered the different groups based on the total frequencies of all the words in the group take away the highest frequency (the exact ordering method here is not very important for us). This is what we have collected in Appendix B.1, Table 18. Ignoring the “total” rows, we observe that if the other conditional probabilities were either 1 or 0, then it would show that the POS tag would perfectly pinpoint the word or, equivalently, the dual signature. Hence, our first observation is that the dual signature and the POS tags are almost interchangeable: if we have the full words, then with great accuracy we can find the POS tags, and, conversely, if we know the POS tags, then we can find the dual signatures with a good probability, see Subsection B.2.

If dual signatures and POS tags are almost interchangeable, then one may wonder why it is helpful to look for the POS tags in order to improve the prediction of the dual signatures. Our second observation concerns the reasoning behind that.

Suppose, for instance, that we tried to predict the current word in a text of some kind based on the history of previous words in the same sentence, and, to be specific, suppose we tried to use the two preceding words. To understand the dependencies between the three words, we may then consider all the possible word combinations based on three words in our dictionary. If the dictionary is one of rather modest size, say 100,000 words, that means we would have to consider (100,000)³=10¹⁵ possibilities. The vast majority of these possible combinations would never occur or be rarely used. Hence, to extract meaningful statistics from this would be very hard, and, from the implementation point of view, it would also be virtually impossible to use the information in a meaningful way. In trying to improve the situation, probably the first thing that comes to mind is to start grouping similar words in the dictionary together and not distinguish between so many different combinations. The POS tags do exactly that: the tags group words together that serve similar roles, from a syntactical point of view, in building a sentence.

The same type of insight can be reached if we consider how we use speech to communicate. The speed of communication can be maintained between two people since the rate of understanding of what is being said is essentially the same as that of speaking. If the person who listened had to go through a huge set of possible interpretations for each word, then it is hard to see how the speed could be maintained. Instead, it is likely that the listener is able to predict what roughly comes next or at least fit the words in established patterns that help the understanding. These general patterns probably rely on the syntactical structure of the language in question.

So, the second observation is that POS tagging and extracting syntactical structure are attempts to establish predictable patterns in our language.

To summarize then, our two basic observations concerning how to find the dual signatures when using a reduced keyboard are the following.

-   -   1. Dual signatures and POS tags contain information that to some         extent is interchangeable and which can be used to pinpoint the         intended words.     -   2. POS tags and syntactical structure rely on patterns that are         predictable and, hence, can form the basis for predictions.

It is instructive to compare the challenge here with that of speech recognition, see [35]. Speech recognition is a comparatively harder problem. In that case, we are presented with some auditory “evidence” a of the intended words w and sentences s, and the task is to reconstruct w and s with high accuracy. If we let P(s|a) be the conditional probability that the sentence s was spoken given the auditory evidence a, and we use a maximum likelihood estimate to reconstruct the sentence, then the problem is to find ŝ=argmax_(s) P(s|a).  (91) Language modeling plays a prominent part in many of the current approaches to speech recognition. 3.4 A Markov Model Approach

In this subsection, we shall start investigating the use of Markov models and POS tagging to reduce the number of words that are incorrectly displayed when using a reduced keyboard.

Once again, we shall use the One-Row Keyboard as a specific example. We shall also follow the exposition in [4] quite closely (cf. pages 189-209); cf. also [42](cf. pages 317-380), [30]. In particular, we shall start by exploring a bigram model, which is simpler than higher order models. For the time being, we shall also restrict ourselves to the on-the-fly processing outlined above.

We assume that we are given a sentence s=w₀ . . . w_(N).  (92) For now, we shall mostly ignore how to treat the period and other punctuation marks and special symbols. We shall often view the sentence s simply as a sequence {w_(i)}_(i=0) ^(N) of words w_(i), i=0, . . . , N. For each word w_(i), there is a unique signature σ_(i) and a dual signature τ_(i). There are potentially several tags κ_(i), each implying a potentially different meaning for the word and the sentence s. Most often, there is one unique tag sequence for all the words of the sentence that reflects the user's intentions.

At the point when the user starts inputting the information for word w_(M) (0≦M≦N), the user is assumed to have made sure that the words w₀, . . . , w_(M−1) are all correct. After inputting the signature σ_(M), the device decoder is then left with the task of finding the sequence of tags κ_(i), i=0, . . . , M and the dual signature τ_(M), ideally corresponding to the user's intended meaning. For example, if we decide to use a maximum likelihood estimate to assess the optimality of the tag sequence κ_(i) and the dual signature τ_(M), then we are interested in finding {circumflex over (κ)}₀, . . . {circumflex over (κ)}_(M), {circumflex over (τ)}_(M) =argmax_(κ) _(0, . . . ,) _(κ) _(M) _(, τ) _(M) Prob(κ₀, . . . , κ_(M), τ_(M) |w ₀ , . . . , w _(M−1), σ_(M)).  (93) Using the definition of conditional probability, the probability on the right-hand side equals

$\frac{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},\kappa_{M},\tau_{M},w_{0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},w_{M - 1},\sigma_{M}} \right)}{P\left( {w_{0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},w_{M - 1},\sigma_{M}} \right)}.$ Now, w₀, . . . , w_(M−1), and σ_(M) are given and fixed while we maximize the quantity in (93). Hence, the denominator here is also fixed, and we have {circumflex over (κ)}₀, . . . {circumflex over (κ)}_(M), {circumflex over (τ)}_(M) =argmax_(κ) ₀ _(, . . . , κ) _(M) _(, τ) _(M) Prob(κ₀, . . . , κ_(M), τ_(M) , w ₀ , . . . , w _(M−1), σ_(M)). Note that there is a unique word w_(M) with w_(M)=(σ_(M), τ_(M)) for each τ_(M). As a consequence {circumflex over (κ)}₀, . . . {circumflex over (κ)}_(M), {circumflex over (τ)}_(M) =argmax_(τ) _(M) max_(κ) ₀ _(, . . . , κ) _(M) {Prob(κ₀, . . . , κ_(M) , w ₀ , . . . , w _(M−1) , w _(M)): w _(M)=(σ_(M), τ_(M))}.  (94) In other words, finding the optimal tag sequence and dual signature is simply a family of tagging problems, one for each possible value of τ_(M) (with σ_(M) fixed). This is one precise formulation of the “substitution test.” This also means that we can immediately use the solution methods for POS tagging to find approximate solutions of (93). The expositions in [4] and [42] use a Hidden Markov Model (HMM) approach based on a bigram model to illustrate the general approach. Here we shall use the same basic illustration, but provide more details concerning our particular problem (93).

Using the definition of conditional probability again, we may rewrite the probability on the right-hand side as follows: Prob(κ₀, . . . , κ_(M), w₀ , . . . , w _(M−1) , w _(M))=Prob(κ₀, . . . , κ_(M))×Prob(w ₀ , . . . , w _(M−1) , w _(M)|κ₀, . . . , κ_(M)).  (95) Each of these two factors are then approximated by simpler ones that are easier to collect.

For the first factor, we first use the “Chain rule” to see that

$\begin{matrix} \begin{matrix} {{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},\kappa_{M}} \right)} = {{{Prob}\left( {{\kappa_{M}\text{❘}\kappa_{0}},\ldots\mspace{11mu},\kappa_{M - 1}} \right)} \times {{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},\kappa_{M - 1}} \right)}}} \\ {= {\prod\limits_{m = 0}^{M}\;{{{Prob}\left( {{\kappa_{m}\text{❘}\kappa_{0}},\ldots\mspace{11mu},\kappa_{m - 1}} \right)}.}}} \end{matrix} & (96) \end{matrix}$ Here κ⁻¹ is defined to be a starting tag so that Prob(κ₀|κ⁻¹)=Prob(κ₀) (i.e. the transition from the starting tag to the first one κ₀ of the sentence). To simplify the calculations of these quantities, we introduce the appropriate independence assumptions. For example, in the case of the trigram model, we assume that a tag κ_(m) only depends on the two preceding tags κ_(m−1), κ_(m−2), and in the case of the bigram model, which we shall use for illustration here, we simply assume that κ_(m) depends on κ_(m−1). Hence, with this approximation we obtain

$\begin{matrix} {{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},\kappa_{M}} \right)} \approx {\prod\limits_{m = 0}^{M}\;{{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{m}\text{❘}\kappa_{m - 1}} \right)}.}}} & (97) \end{matrix}$

For the second factor in (95), it seems reasonable to assume that there is the following type of independence, at least approximately:

$\begin{matrix} {{{Prob}\left( {w_{0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},w_{M - 1},{w_{M}\text{❘}\kappa_{0}},\ldots\mspace{11mu},\kappa_{M}} \right)} \approx {\prod\limits_{0}^{M}\;{{{Prob}\left( {w_{m}\text{❘}\kappa_{m}} \right)}.}}} & (98) \end{matrix}$

With these approximations, we obtain

$\begin{matrix} {\left. {{{Prob}\text{(}\kappa_{0}},\ldots\mspace{11mu},\kappa_{M},w_{0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},w_{M - 1},w_{M}} \right) \approx {\prod\limits_{0}^{M}\;{{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{m}\left. \kappa_{m - 1} \right){{Prob}\left( w_{m} \right.}\kappa_{m}} \right)}.}}} & (99) \end{matrix}$ The solution of the optimization problem (93) is then

$\begin{matrix} {{\hat{\kappa}}_{0},{\ldots\mspace{11mu}{\hat{\kappa}}_{M}},{{\hat{\tau}}_{M} \approx {\arg\mspace{14mu}{\max_{\tau_{M}}\max_{\kappa_{0}}}}},\ldots\mspace{11mu},{\kappa_{M}{\left\{ {{\prod\limits_{0}^{M}\;{{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{m}\left. \kappa_{m - 1} \right){{Prob}\left( w_{m} \right.}\kappa_{m}} \right)}\text{:}w_{M}}} = \left( {\sigma_{M},\tau_{M}} \right)} \right\}.}}} & (100) \end{matrix}$

EXAMPLE 3.1

Let us first fix a tagset, see Table 13, and let us assume that the transition probabilities are given by Table 15. We shall also assume that we are given a dictionary with all the probabilities we need to calculate (100).

TABLE 15 A sample transition matrix (cf. [20]) for standard tags. Out In\ aj0 at0 cd0 cj0 inj nn0 not ord pp$ pp0 prp rb0 to0 vb0 vbd — start 1.92 11.74 0.83 8.90 1.31 13.85 0.40 0.19 1.93 38.30 4.82 9.02 0.27 5.45 1.08 0.00 aj0 5.09 0.51 0.16 7.19 0.01 63.42 0.11 0.08 0.10 2.06 6.85 1.40 3.41 0.81 0.45 8.35 at0 23.89 0.01 0.70 0.01 0.00 69.98 0.00 1.86 0.00 1.64 0.01 1.81 0.00 0.06 0.03 0.01 cd0 9.54 0.57 2.30 4.43 0.05 54.12 0.00 0.38 0.03 2.24 18.51 1.15 0.27 1.56 1.39 3.45 cj0 6.76 12.47 0.82 2.06 0.07 16.86 0.89 0.10 2.70 29.67 3.67 6.96 0.63 8.11 8.04 0.20 inj 0.94 1.77 0.42 4.91 8.35 14.72 1.04 0.00 1.88 33.40 1.36 4.28 0.10 6.78 11.90 8.14 nn0 0.90 1.64 0.19 9.69 0.03 13.00 0.13 0.14 0.24 5.34 21.54 3.70 1.73 11.55 10.90 19.28 not 8.31 6.33 0.30 2.05 0.00 2.05 0.00 0.00 0.75 3.28 4.33 15.19 4.78 40.65 9.06 2.90 ord 4.12 1.39 3.42 2.41 0.00 69.34 0.00 0.21 0.11 5.62 3.48 0.70 0.75 2.09 2.25 4.12 pp$ 10.93 0.00 0.34 0.06 0.00 81.88 0.00 1.10 0.01 5.03 0.02 0.40 0.00 0.20 0.01 0.03 pp0 2.72 2.01 0.25 2.24 0.02 11.29 0.13 0.10 0.33 4.30 4.71 5.17 1.15 29.81 28.66 7.09 prp 8.12 36.32 1.21 0.19 0.00 26.72 0.04 0.09 7.08 15.35 0.19 1.22 0.02 2.96 0.05 0.45 rb0 12.66 6.27 0.82 5.98 0.05 3.25 0.36 0.11 1.15 10.84 12.35 8.10 1.92 12.14 10.46 13.53 to0 0.01 0.02 0.00 0.03 0.00 0.09 0.01 0.00 0.01 0.03 0.01 0.14 0.00 99.32 0.03 0.31 vb0 6.29 12.67 0.47 3.08 0.07 5.37 2.56 0.07 2.83 15.01 8.04 12.21 4.10 12.77 9.40 5.05 vbd 5.19 11.14 0.69 3.74 0.08 5.38 1.74 0.17 3.51 11.75 15.70 14.60 4.18 4.13 9.44 8.54

We shall consider the sentence The man still saw her.  (101) With the One-Row Keyboard, there are several ambiguities since the following words have the same signature:

-   -   bye, the     -   man, may     -   saw, was.         Hence, for the first position we have to separately consider the         following two cases:         Prob(the|κ₀)Prob(κ₀|κ⁻¹)  (102)         and         Prob(bye|κ₀)Prob(κ₀|κ⁻¹)  (103)

For each word we then need to look at the set of tags with nonzero probability, cf. Table 16. For the word “the”, we have κ₀ε {AT, PPO}. For the probabilities, we see that Prob(the|AT)≈0.6639 and Prob(the|PPO)≈0.00001, and according to Table 15, Prob(AT|start)≈0.0756 while Prob(PPO|start)≈0.3507. Hence, the products corresponding to (102) are approximately

-   -   5.020·10⁻² and 2.670·10⁻⁶,         cf. Table 16.

TABLE 16 Tags and probabilities. The man still saw her. i w_(i) k_(i) k_(i−1) Prob(w_(i)|k_(i)) · 100 Prob(k_(i)|k_(i−1)) · 100 Prob(w_(i)|k_(i)) · Prob(k_(i)|k_(i−1)) 0 the at0 {2} 68.246 11.735 8.009 · 10⁻² pp0 {2} 0.001 38.305 5.085 · 10⁻⁶ bye inj {2} 0.104 1.309 1.367 · 10⁻⁵ nn0 {2} 0.001 13.850 9.649 · 10⁻⁷ 1 man nn0 at0 0.442 69.977 3.091 · 10⁻³ nn0 inj 0.442 14.718 6.501 · 10⁻⁴ nn0 nn0 0.442 13.000 5.742 · 10⁻⁴ nn0 pp0 0.442 11.291 4.987 · 10⁻⁴ may nn0 at0 0.013 69.977 8.775 · 10⁻⁵ nn0 inj 0.013 14.718 1.846 · 10⁻⁵ nn0 nn0 0.013 13.000 1.630 · 10⁻⁵ nn0 pp0 0.013 11.291 1.416 · 10⁻⁵ vb0 at0 0.979 0.056 5.441 · 10⁻⁶ vb0 inj 0.979 6.785 6.644 · 10⁻⁴ vb0 nn0 0.979 11.552 1.131 · 10⁻³ vb0 pp0 0.979 29.810 2.919 · 10⁻³ 2 still aj0 nn0 0.060 0.905 5.387 · 10⁻⁶ aj0 vb0 0.060 6.293 3.746 · 10⁻⁵ rb0 nn0 1.463 3.698 5.409 · 10⁻⁴ rb0 vb0 1.463 12.212 1.786 · 10⁻³ 3 saw nn0 aj0 0.003 63.421 2.209 · 10⁻⁵ nn0 rb0 0.003 3.248 1.131 · 10⁻⁶ vbd aj0 0.544 0.450 2.449 · 10⁻⁵ vbd rb0 0.544 10.457 5.690 · 10⁻⁴ was vb0 aj0 0.001 0.807 1.046 · 10⁻⁷ vb0 rb0 0.001 12.145 1.573 · 10⁻⁶ vbd aj0 15.118 0.450 6.804 · 10⁻⁴ vbd rb0 15.118 10.457 1.581 · 10⁻² 4 her pp$ nn0 19.125 0.238 4.557 · 10⁻⁴ pp$ vbd 19.125 3.513 6.718 · 10⁻³ pp0 nn0 1.917 5.345 1.024 · 10⁻³ pp0 vbd 1.917 11.754 2.253 · 10⁻³

Similarly, for the word “bye”, κ₀ε {I N J, N N}, and the two corresponding probabilities are Prob(bye|I N J)≈0.00400 and Prob(bye|N N)≈0.00001. In Table 15 we find Prob(I N J|start)≈0.0542 and Prob(N N|start)≈0.1120. The products in (103) are then

-   -   2.169·10⁻⁴ and 6.121·10⁻⁷.

The largest of all four numbers is clearly the one corresponding to “the” and κ₀=AT.

Now, for the second position we have two competing words, “may” and “man”. Since we are assuming that the user adjusts the input as the process proceeds, we only need to consider the previous tags of “the”, and for simplicity we shall ignore the PPO tag, leaving just one, AT. The three competing products are then

-   -   Prob(man|N N)Prob(N N|AT)Prob(the|AT)Prob(AT|start)≈1.5552·10⁻⁴     -   Prob(may|N N)Prob(N N|AT)Prob(the|AT)Prob(AT|start)≈3.9121·10⁻⁶     -   Prob(may|V B)Prob(V B|AT)Prob(the|AT)Prob(AT|start)≈4.2414·10⁻⁷         Of course, the largest corresponds to “man” with tag N N, and         “the” with tag AT.

In the third position, we only have the word “still” but it has three possible tags (see Table 16): N N, AJ, and RB. We must then choose between the following:

-   -   Prob(still|N N)Prob(N N|N N)Prob(man|N N)Prob(N         N|AT)Prob(the|AT)Prob(AT|start)     -   Prob(still|AJ)Prob(AJ|N N)Prob(man|N N)Prob(N         N|AT)Prob(the|AT)Prob(AT|start)     -   Prob(still|RB)Prob(RB|N N)Prob(man|N N)Prob(N         N|AT)Prob(the|AT)Prob(AT|start)         These products approximately equal 1.0928·10⁻¹⁰, 9.7775·10⁻¹⁰,         and 8.3623·10⁻⁸. Hence, the largest is the last one, which         corresponds to     -   <The, AT><man, N N><still, RB>.

In the next position we have either “saw”, with three tags (N N, V B, and V B D), or “was” with essentially one tag (V B D). As long as we do our search exhaustively (like above), then there are 9 products to consider for “saw” and 6 for “was”, and, hence, we need to compare 15 products. The largest one of these is

-   -   <the, AT><man, N N><still, R B><was, V B D> with probability         1.24908·10⁻⁹         Hence, in this particular instance we would select the wrong         word based on these probabilities.

Finally, we have the word “her” with two tags (PPO and PP$). Hence, we need to calculate 18 products. There are two possibilities with significantly larger probabilities than the rest: 2.788·10⁻¹³, 1.02836·10⁻¹³. The largest one of these corresponds to the “correct” one:

-   -   <The, AT><man, N N><still, RB><saw, V B D><her, PPO>

Remark 3.1 There is one useful remark to make concerning the calculation and normalization of the probabilities of a transition matrix (like the one used in the previous example). Suppose we have a transition matrix T={T_(i,j)}_(i,j=0) ^(n−1) of transition probabilities T_(i,j)=Prob(j|i) from state i to state j, 0≦i, j≦n−1. Then clearly, the column sums must be one:

$\begin{matrix} {{{\sum\limits_{j}T_{i,j}} = 1},{i = 0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},{n - 1.}} & (104) \end{matrix}$ Further, it is convenient if we can rely on the following relationship for the probabilities of the different states P_(i):

$\begin{matrix} {P_{j} = {\sum\limits_{i}{T_{i,j}{P_{i}.}}}} & (105) \end{matrix}$ This expression captures the fact that the collection of states i exhausts all the possibilities for ending up in state j. Now, if we want (104) and (105) to hold and, in addition, to be able to treat each sentence as a separate entity, then we have to be a little careful with how we introduce the start and end symbols. There are a couple of ways to do this. For example, one can introduce an infinite number of start states and end states. Another way, which we follow here, is to make the assumption that the end state transitions into the start state with probability 1. Since the probability of the start symbol is the same as that of the end symbol, the expression (105) will then still hold. For the bigram model, this “periodization” also makes it possible to treat sentences separately since the probability of the transition into the start symbol of a new sentence does not depend on any of the tags of the previous sentence except the end tag. Note that for a higher order model, we need to have more start and end symbols for this to be the case. We observe that the equation (105) shows that the probabilities P_(i) are eigenvectors of the transition matrix T corresponding to the eigenvalue 1.

Let us now return to the general case and equation (100). To calculate this quantity and hence an approximate solution of the optimization problem (94) we can, of course, do it exhaustively; however, as we saw in the example, there is then a very quickly growing number of possibilities to consider. Instead, the standard approach is to use the Viterbi algorithm. It uses the recursive nature of the right-hand side of (100). More specifically, let us introduce the notation

$\begin{matrix} {{{{V_{L}\left( \kappa_{L} \right)} = {\max_{\kappa_{0},\ldots,\kappa_{L - 1}}{\prod\limits_{0}^{L}\;{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{m}\left. \kappa_{m - 1} \right){{Prob}\left( w_{m} \right.}\kappa_{m}} \right)}}}},{0 \leq L \leq M}}{and}} & (106) \\ {\mspace{79mu}{{{V_{- 1}\left( \kappa_{- 1} \right)} = 1.}{{Then}\mspace{14mu}{obviously}}}} & (107) \\ {{{\max_{\kappa_{0},\ldots,\kappa_{M}}{\prod\limits_{0}^{M}\;{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{m}\left. \kappa_{m - 1} \right){{Prob}\left( w_{m} \right.}\kappa_{m}} \right)}}} = {\max_{\kappa_{M}}{V_{M}\left( \kappa_{M} \right)}}},} & (108) \end{matrix}$ which is part of what we need for (100). Notice that V_(L)(κ_(L)) is the (approximation of the) largest probability Prob(κ₀, . . . , κ_(L−1), κ_(L), w₀, . . . , w_(L−1), w_(L)) with the side-condition that the last tag κ_(L) is fixed (and the words w₀, . . . , w_(L) fixed).

On the other hand, by separating out the factor corresponding to m=L from the product in the definition (106) and noticing that this factor is constant while we take the maximum over κ₀, . . . , κ_(L−2), we see that V_(L) satisfies the recursive relation V _(L)(κ_(L))=max_(κ) _(L−1) Prob(w _(L)|κ_(L))Prob(κ_(L)|κ_(L−1))V _(L−1)(κ_(L−1)), 0≦L≦M.  (109) Note that the κ_(L−1) for which the maximum is attained on the right-hand side here is a function of κ_(L). We shall denote this function by B_(L)(κ_(L)): B _(L)(κ_(L))=argmax_(κ) _(L−1) Prob(w _(L)|κ_(L))Prob(κ_(L)|κ_(L−1))V _(L−1)(κ_(L−1)) 1≦L≦M,  (110) and B ₀(κ₀)=κ⁻¹.  (111) Since Prob(w_(L)|κ_(L)) is independent of κ_(L−1), B _(L)(κ_(L))=argmax_(κ) _(L−1) Prob(κ_(L)|κ_(L−1))V _(L−1)(κ_(L−1)), 1≦L≦M.  (112)

Now, let us review how we can go about solving (100). We consider each τ_(M) separately. We obtain {circumflex over (κ)}_(M) from (108): {circumflex over (κ)}_(M) =argmax_(κ) _(M) V _(M)(κ_(M)).  (113) This is easy if we have V_(M)(κ_(M)) for all possible tags κ_(M), and for this we use the recursive relation (109). At each step 0≦L≦M, it gives us V_(L)(K_(L)) for all possible tags κ_(L). Once we have {circumflex over (κ)}_(M), then we can use the recursive relation for B_(L) to obtain the other {circumflex over (κ)}_(L), 0≦L<M−1: {circumflex over (κ)}_(L−1) =B _(L)({circumflex over (κ)}_(L)), 1≦L≦M.  (114) This is possible as long as we know B_(L)(κ_(L)) for all possible tags κ_(L) at each step L, 1≦L≦M. This, in turn, simply means that we record for which tag κ_(L−1) the maximum is attained as we calculate V_(L)(κ_(L)) using (109).

We have now derived and explained the Viterbi algorithm; cf. [4], [42], and especially [32] (and perhaps some reference on dynamic programming like [62]). We also remark that the multiplicative nature of most of the quantities involved in (100) and its solution make it particularly attractive to use the logarithm of the different quantities. Of course, since log x is an increasing function, it is equivalent to maximize (100) and the logarithm of the expression.

EXAMPLE 3.1 CONT'D

As an illustration, let us calculate the quantities V_(L), B_(L), 0≦L≦4 for the sentence (101): “The man still saw her.”

We have

$\begin{matrix} {{V_{0}\left( \kappa_{0} \right)} = {{Prob}\left( {{The}\left. \kappa_{0} \right){{Prob}\left( \kappa_{0} \right.}\kappa_{- 1}} \right)}} \\ {= \left\{ \begin{matrix} {5.02 \cdot 10^{- 2}} & {{{if}\mspace{14mu}\kappa_{0}} = {AT}} \\ {0} & {{otherwise},} \end{matrix} \right.} \end{matrix}$ and B₀(κ₀) = start, for  all  κ₀.

For V₁ we have

$\begin{matrix} {{V_{1}\left( \kappa_{1} \right)} = {{{Prob}\left( {{man}\left. \kappa_{1} \right){{Prob}\left( \kappa_{1} \right.}{AT}} \right)}{V_{0}({AT})}}} \\ {= \left\{ \begin{matrix} {1.55 \cdot 10^{- 4}} & {{{if}\mspace{14mu}\kappa_{1}} = {NN}} \\ {0} & {{otherwise},} \end{matrix} \right.} \end{matrix}$ and  B₁  is  simply B₁(κ₁) = AT  for  all  κ₁.

V₂ is given by

$\begin{matrix} {{V_{2}\left( \kappa_{2} \right)} = {\max_{\kappa_{1}}{{{Prob}\left( {{still}\left. \kappa_{2} \right){{Prob}\left( \kappa_{2} \right.}\kappa_{1}} \right)}{V_{1}\left( \kappa_{1} \right)}}}} \\ {= \left\{ \begin{matrix} {1.09 \cdot^{- 10}} & {{{if}\mspace{14mu}\kappa_{2}} = {NN}} \\ {8.36 \cdot 10^{- 8}} & {{{if}\mspace{14mu}\kappa_{2}} = {RB}} \\ {9.77 \cdot 10^{- 10}} & {{{if}\mspace{14mu}\kappa_{2}} = {AJ}} \\ {0} & {{otherwise},} \end{matrix} \right.} \end{matrix}$ and  B₂  is B₂(κ₂) = NN  for  all  κ₂.

The function V₃ is then

$\begin{matrix} {{V_{3}\left( \kappa_{3} \right)} = {\max_{\kappa_{2}}{{{Prob}\left( {{s{aw}}\left. \kappa_{3} \right){{Prob}\left( \kappa_{3} \right.}\kappa_{2}} \right)}{V_{2}\left( \kappa_{2} \right)}}}} \\ {= \left\{ \begin{matrix} {6.74 \cdot 10^{- 14}} & {{{if}\mspace{14mu}\kappa_{3}} = {NN}} \\ {8.55 \cdot 10^{- 14}} & {{{if}\mspace{14mu}\kappa_{3}} = {VB}} \\ {4.69 \cdot 10^{- 11}} & {{{if}\mspace{14mu}\kappa_{3}} = {VBD}} \\ {0} & {{otherwise},} \end{matrix} \right.} \end{matrix}$ and  B₃  is B₃(κ₃) = RB  for  all  κ₃.

Finally,

${V_{4}\left( \kappa_{4} \right)} = {{\max_{\kappa_{3}}{{{Prob}\left( {{her}\text{❘}\kappa_{4}} \right)}{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{4}\text{❘}\kappa_{3}} \right)}{V_{3}\left( \kappa_{3} \right)}}} = \left\{ {{\begin{matrix} {2.79 \cdot 10^{- 13}} & {{{if}\mspace{14mu}\kappa_{4}} = {PP\$}} \\ {1.03 \cdot 10^{- 13}} & {{{if}\mspace{14mu}\kappa_{4}} = {PPO}} \\ 0 & {{otherwise},} \end{matrix}{and}\mspace{14mu}\mspace{79mu} B_{4}\mspace{14mu}{is}\mspace{14mu}{B_{4}\left( \kappa_{4} \right)}} = {{VBD}\mspace{14mu}{for}\mspace{14mu}{all}\mspace{14mu}{\kappa_{4}.}}} \right.}$

Now, using the expression for V₄, we see that {circumflex over (κ)}₄=arg max_(κ) ₄ V₄(κ₄)=PPO. Then using the different B_(L)'s to backtrack, we find {circumflex over (κ)}₃=VBD, {circumflex over (κ)}₂=RB, {circumflex over (κ)}₁=N N, and {circumflex over (κ)}₀=AT. This corresponds to the following sequence

-   -   <The, AT><man, N N><still, RB><saw, V B D><her, PPO>.

Next we shall go through the changes necessary for a trigram model. The basic problem is still the same of course, see (93) and (94). Starting with the expression (96), a consequence of the “Chain Rule”, (96), the trigram model means that

$\begin{matrix} {{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},\kappa_{M}} \right)} \approx {\prod\limits_{m = 0}^{M}\;{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{m}{\left. {\kappa_{m - 1},\kappa_{m - 2}} \right).}} \right.}}} & (115) \end{matrix}$ Here we define κ⁻¹=κ⁻² both as starting tags. In particular, Prob(κ₀|κ⁻¹, κ⁻²) is the probability that the sequence of words (or more generally character combinations) start with a κ₀ tag. Similarly, Prob(κ₁|κ₀, κ⁻¹) is the probability that κ₁ comes as the second tag after a κ₀. Sometimes it may be reasonable to approximate these simply by Prob(κ₀) and Prob(κ₁|κ₀), respectively. The definition of the basic quantity V_(L) is now

$\begin{matrix} {{{{V_{L}\left( {\kappa_{L},\kappa_{L - 1}} \right)} = {\max_{\kappa_{0},\ldots,\kappa_{L - 2}}{\prod\limits_{0}^{L}\;{{{Prob}\left( {{\kappa_{m}\text{❘}\kappa_{m - 1}},\kappa_{m - 2}} \right)}{{Prob}\left( {w_{m}\text{❘}\kappa_{m}} \right)}}}}},{1 \leq L \leq M}}{and}} & (116) \\ {\mspace{79mu}{{V_{- 1}\left( {\kappa_{- 1},\kappa_{- 2}} \right)} = 1.}} & (117) \end{matrix}$ With this, the recursive relation replacing (109) is V _(L)(κ_(L),κ_(L−1))=max_(κ) _(L−2) Prob(w _(L)|κ_(L))Prob(κ_(L)|κ_(L−1),κ_(L−2))V _(L−1)(κ_(L−1),κ₂), 0≦L≦M.  (118) The corresponding function B_(L)(κ_(L), κ_(L−1)) is defined by B _(L)(κ_(L),κ_(L−1))=argmax_(κ) _(L−2) Prob(w _(L)|κ_(L))Prob(κ_(L)|κ_(L−1),κ_(L−2))V _(L−1)(κ_(L−1),κ_(L−2)), 1≦L≦M,  (119) and B ₀(κ₀,κ⁻¹)=κ⁻².  (120) Since Prob(w_(L)|κ_(L)) is independent of κ_(L−2), B _(L)(κ_(L),κ_(L−1))=argmax_(κ) _(L−2) Prob(κ_(L)|κ_(L−1),κ_(L−2))V _(L−1)(κ_(L−1),κ_(L−2)), 1≦L≦M.  (121) With these modifications, the Viterbi algorithm works as before.

Remark 3.2 A similar remark as Remark 3.1 applies to higher order models as well. For example, in the trigram case we have a transition “matrix” T={T_(i,j,k)}_(i,j,k=0) ^(n−1) of transition probabilities T_(i,j,k)=Prob(k|j, i) from states i followed by j into state k, 0≦i, j, k≦n−1. Then clearly, the column sums must be one:

$\begin{matrix} {{{{\sum\limits_{k}T_{i,j,k}} = 1},i,{j = 0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},{n - 1.}}{{Also},}} & (122) \\ {{{T_{j,k}P_{j}} = {\sum\limits_{i}{T_{i,j,k}T_{i,j}P_{i}}}},} & (123) \end{matrix}$ where T_(j,k)=Prob(k|j) is the bigram transition matrix. Hence, for each fixed j, {T_(i,j)P_(i)}_(i) is an eigenvector of {T_(i,j,k)}_(i,k) corresponding to the eigenvalue 1. To be able to treat each sentence separately in the analogous manner to the bigram case, we now need at least as many symbols for the start and end as the order of the model. So for the trigram we need at least three symbols. However, in many of our experiments we work with two end symbols and two start symbols (all with the same probability). Of course, for the periodization to work, either way is satisfactory.

We remark that the above changes for the trigram model, and analogous modifications for other higher order models, can easily be derived directly from the bigram model by adopting a “vector” notation for the states, just like a higher order Markov model can be viewed as a first order one by changing the definition of the states. For example, to derive the trigram model we may introduce the notation {right arrow over (κ)}_(i)=(κ_(i),κ_(i−1)),  (124) and then the derivation used for the bigram model produces the above formulas (with some trivial, mostly notational differences) for the trigram case.

With this understanding, we now go back to the bigram case since it illustrates sufficiently well the general case and is a little simpler from a notation point of view.

Let us once again consider the approximate solution (100). Until now, we have treated the different words with a given signature σ_(M) and different dual signatures τ_(M) separately, obtaining the maximum over τ_(M) by repeating the same basic process for each separate word and, afterwards, comparing and taking the maximum. This is also how we have approached the discussion of the Viterbi algorithm, see (113) and (114) and the text there. There is another way to handle the dual signatures r which is more useful in several ways.

The maximums in (100) can, of course, be taken in any order. Instead of leaving the maximum over τ_(M) until last, let us start with it. The only factor that depends on τ_(M) in the product is Prob(w_(M)|κ_(M)). So the maximum is obtained by maximizing just this factor over τ_(M). Suppose we let ŵ denote the maximum likelihood estimator of a word, given the tag κ and the signature σ: ŵ=ŵ(σ,κ)=argmax_(w)Prob(w|σ,κ).  (125) Then the maximum over τ_(M) in (100) is obtained for ŵ _(M) =ŵ _(M)(σ_(M),κ_(M)),  (126) and the maximum value of the factor Prob(w_(M)|κ_(M)) is Prob(ŵ_(M)|κ_(M)). This follows, for instance, from the fact that Prob(w|κ)=Prob(σ|κ)Prob(w|σ,κ) and, hence, argmax_(τ)Prob(w|κ)=argmax_(τ)Prob(σ|κ)Prob(w|σ,κ)=argmax_(τ)Prob(w|σ,κ).

We have briefly touched upon the quantity (126) earlier in connection with the discussion of our first motivation for our approach, back in Subsection 3.3, and then more fully in Appendix Appendix B, subsection B.2. As we observed in Subsection 3.3, the tags for the different words within a “collision group” (the group of words with a certain signature) overlap very little. In fact, in Appendix Appendix B, subsection B.2 we saw that with 99.6% probability (on the average) this maximum likelihood estimator pinpoints the right word, as long as the tag κ_(M) is correct. Hence, with very little error, we may think of the tag sets for the different words within a collision group as being disjoint, without overlap.

Similarly, the maximum over τ_(M) is easily incorporated directly into the Viterbi algorithm. We simply replace the quantity V_(M) in (106) by {circumflex over (V)} _(M)(κ_(M))=max_(τ) _(M) V _(M)(κ_(M)).  (127) Then the maximum on the right-hand side of (100) is given by

$\begin{matrix} {\max\limits_{\kappa_{M}}{{{\hat{V}}_{M}\left( \kappa_{M} \right)}.}} & (128) \end{matrix}$ Only the last term L=M needs to be modified in the recursive relation (109): {circumflex over (V)} _(M)(κ_(M))=max_(κ) _(M−1) Prob(ŵ _(M)|κ_(M))Prob(κ_(M)|κ_(M−1))V _(M−1)(κ_(M−1)).  (129) The functions B_(L), 0≦L≦M are not affected, cf. equation (112). Instead of equation (113), we now obtain both {circumflex over (κ)}_(M) and {circumflex over (τ)}_(M) from {circumflex over (κ)}_(M),{circumflex over (τ)}_(M) =argmax_(κ) _(M) _(,τ) _(M) V _(M)(κ_(M))=arg _(τ) _(M) argmax_(κ) _(M) {circumflex over (V)} _(M)(κ_(M)).  (130)

This change in the handling of τ_(M) also suggests a different interpretation of the underlying Hidden Markov Model. As long as we treat the different τ_(M)'s separately, we are considering several different Hidden Markov Models, one for each τ_(M), and each producing a word w_(M) with the output probability Prob(w_(M)|κ_(M)). The hiddens states, however, are the same for all of these models. Alternatively, by moving the maximum over τ_(M), we may think of the process as one “Hidden Markov Model” that outputs the maximum likelihood estimator ŵ_(M) in the Mth step with probability Prob(ŵ_(M)|κ_(M)). Note, however, that the process just described is strictly speaking not a Hidden Markov Model since the sum of all the probabilities Prob(ŵ_(M)|κ_(M)) for each fixed κ_(M) is in general strictly less than one.

Let us now also take a closer look at the recursive relation (109) for V_(M). We write V _(M) =V _(M)(κ_(M),τ_(M))=Prob(w _(M)|κ_(M))Q _(M−1)(κ_(M))  (131) with Q _(M−1)(κ_(M))=max_(κ) _(M−1) Prob(κ_(M)|κ_(M−1))V _(M−1)(κ_(M−1)).  (132) The function Q_(M−1) is the probability of the path up to the M−1th step. In order to obtain the (approximate) solution of the optimization problem (93), given by the right-hand side of (100), we just take the maximum over κ_(M) and τ_(M) of V_(M). More generally, if we are interested in finding the K most likely words and tags, we just have to pick the K largest ones of the numbers {V_(M)(κ_(M), τ_(M))}_(κ) _(M) _(, τ) _(M) . We shall say that the probabilities {Prob(w_(M)|κ_(M))}_(κ) _(M) _(, τ) _(M) have been Q-ordered when the sequence {V_(M)(κ_(M), τ_(M))}_(κ) _(M) _(, τ) _(M) is rearranged in nonincreasing order.

We may want to use these numbers {V_(M)(κ_(M), τ_(A))}_(κ) _(M) _(,τ) _(M) to decide in what order to display the different possible alternatives. The solution to the maximum likelihood problem is then the word that goes on the screen in the input area. The other words correspond to the different alternatives. Notice that V_(M)(κ_(M), τ_(M))'s corresponding to different τ's will result in different words. So, for display purposes we are in effect using a slightly different ordering than the Q ordering: starting from the sequence {V_(M)(κ_(M), τ_(M))}_(κ) _(M) _(,τ) _(M) , we generate the new sequence {V*_(M)(τ_(M))}_(τ) _(M) by letting V* _(M)(τ_(M))=max_(κ) _(M) V _(M)(κ_(M),τ_(M))  (133) We shall say that the words w_(M) for the different τ's (and σ fixed) have been Q*-ordered when the corresponding sequence {V*_(M)(τ_(M))}_(τ) _(M) has been rearranged in a nonincreasing fashion.

It is now clear how to refine the results from the previous sections to incorporate the considerations in this one. Given a dictionary D we let D(κ) be the collection of all words with tag κ.

Similarly, if D is the collection of all valid character combinations, then for each κ we let D(κ) be the valid character combinations corresponding to the entities in D(κ). Also, D(σ, κ) are generated by the character combinations of elements in V with signature σ and tag κ.

Clearly, D=∪ _(κ) D (κ)=∪_(σ,κ) D (σ,κ)  (134)

Now we can work with character combinations w ε D instead of just the complete words w ε D. For example, in connection with the Viterbi algorithm and equation (131) we use the quantity V _(M) = V _(M)(κ_(M),w_(M))=Prob(w _(M)|κ_(M))Q _(M−1)(κ_(M)), w _(M) ε D   (135) in the last step, as the user is entering characters. These valid letter combinations can now also be Q*-ordered, using the function V _(M) instead of V_(M). For display purposes we can choose to display the character combinations with that order or we can also use a cost function, see Section 5. For example, the analog of the maximum likelihood solution (175) is now

$\begin{matrix} {\min_{u\; \in {\overset{\_}{??}{(\sigma)}}}{\sum\limits_{\kappa}{\sum\limits_{w\; \in \;{\overset{\_}{??}{({\sigma,\kappa})}}}{{C_{i}\left( {w,u} \right)}{{{\overset{\_}{V}}_{M}\left( {\kappa,w} \right)}.}}}}} & (136) \end{matrix}$

The starting point for our discussion of the Markov model approach has been equation (93). The underlying assumption is that we are interested in finding the maximum likelihood estimation of both the dual signature of the M:th word as well as the tag sequence that is most likely to capture the user's intended meaning. Next, we shall outline how the same basic arguments and models also provide an approximation of the maximum likelihood solution {circumflex over (τ)}_(M) =argmax_(τ) _(M) Prob(τ_(M) |w ₀ , . . . , w _(M−1), σ_(M)),  (137) as well as an analog of the Viterbi algorithm. Both of the problems (93) and (137) are interesting for the disambiguation of the input from a reduced keyboard. The first one provides us with a way of trying to understand and predict the user's intention, while the second ignores this aspect (modulo the basic underlying model) and simply asks for the most likely dual signature, no matter what the particular tag sequence is.

Now, with the same argument as before, we have {circumflex over (τ)}_(M) =argmax_(τ) _(M) {Prob(w ₀ , . . . , w _(M−1) , w _(M)): w _(M)=(σ_(M), τ_(M))}.  (138) By considering all possible state sequences, we may rewrite this as

$\begin{matrix} {{\hat{\tau}}_{M} = {\arg{\;\mspace{11mu}}{\max_{\tau_{M}}{\sum\limits_{\kappa_{0},\ldots,\kappa_{M}}{\left\{ {{{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},\kappa_{M},w_{0},{\ldots\mspace{11mu} w_{M - 1}},w_{M}} \right)}\text{:}\mspace{14mu} w_{M}} = \left( {\sigma_{M},\tau_{M}} \right)} \right\}.}}}}} & (139) \end{matrix}$ This replaces (94) in the earlier argument. With the conditions (97) (the Markov condition) and (98) (the independence condition) we obtain

$\begin{matrix} {{\hat{\tau}}_{M} \approx {\arg\mspace{14mu}{\max_{\tau_{M}}{\sum\limits_{\kappa_{0},\ldots,\kappa_{M}}\left\{ {{\prod\limits_{0}^{M}\;{{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{m}\text{❘}\kappa_{m - 1}} \right)}{{Prob}\left( {w_{m}\text{❘}\kappa_{m}} \right)}\text{:}\mspace{20mu} w_{M}}} = \;{\left. \quad\left( {\sigma_{M},\tau_{M}} \right) \right\}.}}\; \right.}}}} & (140) \end{matrix}$ This is thus the replacement for equation (100), which was our starting point for the discussion of the Viterbi algorithm. Note that the difference between the two equations (100) and (140) is that the maximum over the tags in the former is replaced by the sum in the latter.

The analog of the Viterbi algorithm is just as easy. Let us introduce

$\begin{matrix} {{{{U_{L}\left( \kappa_{L} \right)} = {\sum\limits_{\kappa_{0},\ldots,\kappa_{L - 1}}{\prod\limits_{0}^{L}\;{{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{m}\text{❘}\kappa_{m - 1}} \right)}{{Prob}\left( {w_{m}\text{❘}\kappa_{m}} \right)}}}}},{0 \leq L \leq M}}{and}} & (141) \\ {\mspace{79mu}{{{U_{- 1}\left( \kappa_{- 1} \right)} = 1.}{Then}}} & (142) \\ {{{\underset{\mspace{79mu}{\kappa_{0},\ldots,\kappa_{M}}}{\mspace{56mu}\sum}{\prod\limits_{0}^{M}\;{{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{m}\text{❘}\kappa_{m - 1}} \right)}{{Prob}\left( {w_{m}\text{❘}\kappa_{m}} \right)}}}} = {\sum\limits_{\kappa_{M}}{U_{M}\left( \kappa_{M} \right)}}},} & (143) \end{matrix}$ and the approximate solution needed in (140) is then obtained by taking the maximum over τ_(M) on the right-hand side. The recursive relation for U_(L) is

$\begin{matrix} {{{U_{L}\left( \kappa_{L} \right)} = {\sum\limits_{\kappa_{L - 1}}{{{Prob}\left( {w_{L}\text{❘}\kappa_{L}} \right)}{{Prob}\left( {\kappa_{L}\text{❘}\kappa_{L - 1}} \right)}{U_{L - 1}\left( \kappa_{L - 1} \right)}}}},{0 \leq L \leq {M.}}} & (144) \end{matrix}$ Given this expression it is now clear how to modify the other equations and definitions above, including the definitions of the Q and Q*-orderings.

We shall refer to the modification of the Viterbi algorithm outlined above as the “Forward” algorithm.

3.5 Evaluation of the Markov Model Approach

We have evaluated various versions of the Markov model approach, using Corpus 1.

Now, using the bigram Viterbi algorithm, as well as the bigram Forward algorithm, a significant improvement of the “most frequent word algorithm” (i.e., using the most probable word as the prediction within each collision group) is achieved. Specifically, we have found that the overall improvement is approximately

$\begin{matrix} {\frac{\begin{matrix} {{\#\mspace{14mu}{errors}\mspace{14mu}{using}\mspace{14mu}{most}\mspace{14mu}{frequent}} -} \\ {\#\mspace{14mu}{errors}\mspace{14mu}{using}\mspace{14mu}{bigram}\mspace{14mu}{Viterbi}} \end{matrix}}{\#\mspace{14mu}{errors}\mspace{14mu}{using}\mspace{14mu}{most}\mspace{14mu}{frequent}} \approx {33\%}} & (145) \end{matrix}$

We have also investigated the corresponding improvement within each collision group. In the table 17 we have collected the results for the ten collision groups for which the “most frequent algorithm” produces the most errors.

TABLE 17 The impact on the ten collision groups with largest number of errors. (#errors mf/bigram = number of errors using “the most frequent algorithm”/bigram Viterbi) Most frequent vs. bigram Viterbi. # Words # errors mf # errors bigram % improvement 0 Total 1802 1631 9.49 of 0 138 −100 or 1801 1492 17.16 lr 1 1 0.00 1 Total 1210 1174 2.98 they 0 104 −100 then 1210 1070 11.57 2 Total 965 746 22.69 now 0 518 −100 how 965 228 76.37 3 Total 758 303 60.03 must 0 64 −100 just 758 239 68.47 4 Total 652 426 34.66 to 0 4 −100 go 652 422 35.28 5 Total 636 126 80.19 may 0 67 −100 man 634 57 91.01 jay 1 1 0.00 jan 1 1 0.00 6 Total 542 52 90.41 way 0 6 −100 say 538 42 92.19 san 2 2 0.00 wan 2 2 0.00 7 Total 461 149 67.68 good 0 45 −100 told 433 76 82.45 gold 20 20 0.00 bold 5 5 0.00 bloc 1 1 0.00 bole 1 1 0.00 tood 1 1 0.00 8 Total 414 154 62.80 can 0 29 −100 day 413 124 69.98 dan 1 1 0.00 9 Total 325 322 0.92 was 0 2 −100 saw 321 316 1.56 sas 3 3 0.00 wax 1 1 0.00 3.6 Approximate Typing and Typing Models Revisited

In the previous section we considered approximate typing and typing models. For example, for finding the most likely character combination(s) to present to the user as he provides his input, we have by (11) {circumflex over (v)}≈argmax_(v)Prob(v|σ ^(v))Prob(σ^(v)|σ^(a))=argmax_(v)Prob(v|σ ^(v))Prob(σ^(v),σ^(a)).  (146)

To estimate Prob(σ^(v)|σ^(a)), or equivalently, Prob(σ^(v), σ^(a)), we also discussed the need for modeling. For example, we suggested the basic model given by equation (58), p(σ^(v), σ^(a))=P(σ^(v))π(σ^(a)|σ^(v)), σ^(v)ε S^(v), σ^(a)ε S^(a).

We also illustrated the use of similar arguments involving typing models in connection with speeding tip searches. In that case, we may be interested in the most likely valid signature σ^(v) given a certain typed combination σ^(a): {circumflex over (σ)}^(v) =argmax_(v)Prob(σ^(v)|σ^(a))=argmax_(v)Prob(σ^(v),σ^(a)).  (147)

These equations are similar to (94), and in this subsection we shall describe how the Hidden Markov Model techniques we have discussed relate to the results about approximate typing.

We assume that the intended signature σ^(v) and the typed signature σ^(a) are given by the individual characters σ_(i) ^(v) and σ_(j) ^(a), respectively: σ^(v)=σ₀ ^(v)σ₁ ^(v) . . . σ_(M) ^(v), σ^(a)=σ₀ ^(a)σ₁ ^(a) . . . σ_(N) ^(a).  (148)

Hence, for problems like (146) and (147), we need to estimate Prob(σ^(v),σ^(a))=Prob(σ₀ ^(v), . . . , σ_(M) ^(v), σ₀ ^(a), . . . , σ_(N) ^(a)).  (149) If each intended character corresponded to a keystroke, then we could argue as in the derivation of equation (99) and obtain an estimate. However, the user may sometimes type extra characters or omit intended characters, so such a correspondence is not quite available to us.

While we take a closer look at this, we shall also make the connection with the edit distance more explicit.

As in Subsections 2.8 and 2.9, we shall use the characters of σ^(v) at the current and previous positions to define our states (this corresponds to the bigrams above); see FIG. 4. For each state, we have versions of the basic operators {id, su, de, in, tr} we have used for the edit distance. And as we step along the characters of σ^(v), these operators are applied to produce the output characters of σ^(a); see FIGS. 5 and 6.

So, corresponding to the basic states in FIG. 4, we have the following basic operators:

σ 1 ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ ⟶ id ⁢ ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ σ 3 ⁢ ⁢ σ 1 ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ ⟶ su ⁢ ⁢ ⫬ σ 2 ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ σ 3 ⁢ ⁢ σ 1 ⁢σ 2 ⁢ ⟶ de ⁢ ε ⁢ ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ σ 3 ⁢ ⁢ σ 1 ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ ⟶ in ⁢ * ⁢ ⁢ σ 1 ⁢ σ 2 ( 150 ) σ 1 ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ ⟶ tr 0 ⁢ ⁢ σ 3 ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ σ 3 ⁢ σ 4 ⁢ ⁢ σ 1 ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ ⟶ tr 1 ⁢ ⁢ ⫬ σ 3 ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ σ 3 ⁢ σ 4 ⁢ ⁢ σ 1 ⁢ σ 2 ⁢ ⟶ tr 2 ⁢ ⁢ σ 3 ⁢ ⫬ σ 2 ⁢ σ 3 ⁢ σ 4 ( 151 ) Here we have used the notation

σ_(i) to denote any of the symbols in the output alphabet besides σ_(i); * is any one of the symbols; and ε is the empty symbol. Note that the transposition operator corresponds to three mutually exclusive possibilities (similar to the fact that substitution breaks up into two separate cases, one corresponding to the identity, and then those that change the character from σ^(v) into something else).

Compared to the setting for the NLP-processing, there are two significant differences to note: there are transitions that do not generate any output, and there are outputs that are generated while there is not state transition. The first corresponds to applying the deletion de operator, and the latter to the insertion operator in; cf. FIGS. 5 and 6. Now, in the context of HMM modeling, both of the differences are part of the well understood modifications of standard HMM:s; the first correspond to so-called null-transitions, and the second involves time-duration modeling when the system may remain in the same state for more than one time unit and the outputs are generated at each clock-tick; cf. [35], p. 23 and [32], p. 406.

With κ₀, . . . , κ_(M), w₀, . . . , w_(M) corresponding to σ^(v)=σ₀ ^(v) . . . σ_(M) ^(v) and σ^(a)=σ₀ ^(a) . . . σ_(N) ^(a), respectively, the analog of equation (95) is Prob(σ^(v), σ^(a))=Prob(σ^(v))×Prob(σ^(a)|σ^(v)) or, with our basic model (58), Prob(σ^(v), σ^(a))≈p(σ^(v), σ^(a))=P(σ^(v))π(π^(a)|σ^(v)). The basic independence assumption, corresponding to equation (98), is now that each character of σ^(a) is independent of the others once we are given the underlying, intended σ^(v):

$\begin{matrix} {{{Prob}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon}\text{❘}\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)} \approx {\prod\limits_{0}^{M}\;{{\pi\left( {\sigma_{i}^{\alpha}\text{❘}\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}.}}} & (152) \end{matrix}$ Further, σ_(i) ^(a) only depends on the two characters of σ^(v) that define the state the system is in when the character is output.

The Markov assumption (97) is here replaced by P(σ^(v)), which is obtained from an appropriate context or corpus. Hence, the analog of equation (99) is simply

$\begin{matrix} {{{{Prob}\left( {\sigma^{\upsilon},\sigma^{\alpha}} \right)} \approx {{P\left( \sigma^{\upsilon} \right)}{\prod\limits_{0}^{M}\;{\pi\left( {\sigma_{i}^{\alpha}\text{❘}\sigma^{\upsilon}} \right)}}}},} & (153) \end{matrix}$ and this is essentially the approximation we used in Subsections 2.8 and 2.9.

Also, it is clear that the Viterbi algorithm yields essentially the “transform paths” we used back in those subsections as well (there we used the edit distance to obtain these), and that the standard edit distance can also be obtained as a special case of the considerations here.

The Markov assumption (97) may still be quite useful when the probabilities P(σ^(v)) are difficult to obtain.

There is a final comment we want to make about the intersection between the methods in this subsection and approximate typing. In this section, we have assumed that the input process does not involve any input errors. However, it is also clear that the same considerations, relying on POS tags and tagging, can be used in the context of approximate typing. In fact, in the case of the input process with errors, these NLP-type methods work very well to reduce the search for the best alternatives to present to the user.

4 An Implementation of Compact, Tag-Based Disambiguation

4.1 Context-Based Disambiguation

The context of a word that has been ambiguously entered has much information that can be used to disambiguate the input to arrive at the actual word. Context can range from context-based dictionaries to words located around the word being typed. The following are some instances:

-   -   Target audience: A dictionary adapted to a Wall Street Journal         editor will perform better for the corresponding target audience         than a general one.     -   Function/style of text entry: A dictionary adapted to writing         SMS messages will perform better for that function than a         general one.     -   Grammatical information: A set of grammatical rules with         comparison to actual entry can aid disambiguation.

In general, the information needs to be specialized and ideally adapted to the particular individual using it. In this chapter, a disambiguation mechanism, using word tag information, is suggested that can be applied to text input disambiguation for reduced keyboards and mobile input mechanisms such as T9 and the ORK.

4.2 Use of Tags

Ideally, one would like to use prior information of entire corpora captured in terms of word information. However, it is quite impractical to describe word relations when the solution is aimed at a compact, portable computing system such as a cell phone. For instance, for a Markov-based stochastic model, one would like to have prior probabilities of a word conditioned on the words surrounding it. However, it is virtually impossible to fit all such probability values into a small memory. Hence, a common approach is to figure out common rules that can be applied to groups of words. Grammatical information allows us to derive common strains from varied words and collect these in equivalence classes. The corresponding class can be referred to by a tag. Typically, a word (or other appropriate character unit) can have several tags associated with corresponding probabilities.

For grammatical tags, it is known that the most frequent tag of a word is accurate more than 90% of the time. This is an important piece of information that we will use later to reduce computational complexity and storage, by assuming that the tag of a contextual word is more or less deterministic.

It should be noted that while we intend to apply this method of utilizing tags for representing prior grammatical information, it is equally useful for other word groups also.

4.3 Markov and Rule-Based Approaches

Tagging of words is a well explored area of natural language processing; see the previous section. The process of word disambiguation can be broken down into two parts: first, tagging of the input words/signatures and, second, choosing the word with the maximum probability of the given tag within the set of words with the given signature. Ideally, one has to solve both simultaneously by summing over various possible tags for a given word that is being disambiguated to maximize the likelihood of the word being selected and not the tag. This can be a rather computationally intensive problem to solve with the Markov approach.

Rule-based approaches, such as that for grammatical tagging by [11], [10], avoid storage of conditional probabilities and require going through the corpora several times to determine rules that lead to a general reduction in prediction error, starting from a base model that works most of the time. For text input disambiguation, simply selecting the most frequent word alternative for a given signature is known to be correct approximately 95% of the time. Thus, rule-based approaches are attractive for improving upon that figure without worrying about loss of accuracy elsewhere, especially given that they have a compact representation. However, a direct method to apply the rule-based technique to rule learning during actual run-time usage is not readily available. This is an important observation since it can be anticipated that it will be necessary to adapt to several individualistic writing styles, presumably following varied grammatical rules. A method that uses a common approach to offline training as well as real-time learning is all the more desirable.

4.4 Simplifying Assumptions

We shall make the following assumptions.

-   -   Since we are primarily concerned with progressive text entry, it         is reasonable to assume that, in most cases, the word context         information is from previous words only and that no word typed         to the right of the current word being disambiguated is used.     -   We have indicated that we will be assigning deterministic tags         to contextual words. This means that the words to the left of a         given word will be assigned the most probable tag (in a purely         deterministic fashion). Note that this does not compromise the         assignment of tags to the group of words being disambiguated for         the current signature, since we will effectively be conditioning         the probability of the current word on previous tags, and we         will not be concerned with probable tags of the current word.     -   We will restrict our contextual memory to two words to the left         of the current word, i.e., we will effectively use trigram         probabilities. (We will break at phrase delimiters such as the         period or the semi-colon.)         4.5 Collecting Prior Tag Information

Our attempt here is to build on the ≈95% accuracy that we have by simple assignment of the most frequent word as the selection of the disambiguation group. We will thus begin with the following set of information prior to training:

-   -   The frequency of each word.     -   The most likely tag for each word.     -   For assigning a tag to an unknown word, we will apply commonly         used techniques, e.g., described by Brill [11], [10] using word         endings and other parameters.

Next, we shall go through the mechanism to build the necessary information database to enable us to make better judgments. Later, we will describe how this database can be dynamically reduced in size by applying several restrictions without seriously compromising the performance.

The training procedure is to scan through an untagged corpus word by word, using the flowchart in FIG. 7 to record information as each word is scanned. Note that infinite precision is assumed to be available for the reference count, and the storage memory is also assumed not to be a constraint in this preliminary training model. The result of the training process will be a trellis of the type shown in FIG. 8. Note that the word corresponding to each entry is indicated on the branch connecting the two previous tags, instead of generating a third vertical level of the trigram. This method of storage seems expensive (memory-wise). It is only when we apply the limiting assumptions that the sparseness of the trellis and the table of reference counts will be fully exploited.

Note that the empty tag in the second column of the trellis will not be connected with the method outlined thus far. Its use will become clear in the following subsections.

4.6 Disambiguation

We will now discuss how the information compiled may be used in run-time to improve upon disambiguation accuracy. Typically, we will need to divide the existing trellis into possibly more meaningful information that we will call “rules,” and then we will use a criterion to determine which rule should be applied in case we have multiple rules being satisfied in a given context. The following information needs to be derived (adapted from Brill):

-   -   Previous word tag count: This may be calculated per the previous         tag and per word as a reference count measure by summing up the         reference counts of corresponding branches coming into the tag         in the trellis.     -   One before previous word count: This may similarly be calculated         by summing up all branches going out of a particular tag in the         trellis on a per-word basis.     -   One of two before: This may be calculated by summing up the         above two values per tag per word and then subtracting from it         the reference count per word of the branch originating from the         same tag and also going into the same.

The flowchart in FIG. 9 may be used to carry out the actual disambiguation. Choosing the word with the maximum ratio

$\begin{matrix} {r = \frac{\;\begin{matrix} {{{Highest}\mspace{14mu}{reference}\mspace{14mu}{count}\mspace{14mu}{excluding}}\mspace{11mu}} \\ {{that}\mspace{14mu}{of}\mspace{14mu}{the}\mspace{14mu}{most}\mspace{14mu}{frequent}\mspace{14mu}{word}} \end{matrix}}{{Reference}\mspace{14mu}{count}\mspace{14mu}{of}\mspace{14mu}{the}\mspace{14mu}{most}\mspace{14mu}{frequent}\mspace{14mu}{word}}} & (154) \end{matrix}$ such that r>1, ensures that we choose an alternative to the highest frequency word only if the context indicates that an alternative selection is more likely. (If we need to delay immediate application of run-time training, we may have a criterion r>R such that R>1.) In case of ties between various words for a given ratio r, we may choose the one with the highest frequency.

Note that in most cases the check for R can be applied before comparison of ratios to eliminate the greatest number of possibilities.

When the reference count of the most frequent word is zero, r will be infinity. This may incorrectly favor rules that do not have enough training data. To counter this, we redefine r as:

$\begin{matrix} {\frac{\begin{matrix} \left( {{Highest}\mspace{14mu}{reference}\mspace{14mu}{count}\mspace{14mu}{excluding}} \right. \\ {{that}\mspace{14mu}{of}\mspace{14mu}{the}\mspace{14mu}{most}\mspace{14mu}{frequent}\mspace{14mu}{word}} \end{matrix}}{\begin{matrix} {{Greater}\mspace{14mu}} \\ \left( {1,{{Reference}\mspace{14mu}{count}\mspace{14mu}{of}\mspace{14mu}{the}\mspace{14mu}{most}\mspace{14mu}{frequent}\mspace{14mu}{word}}} \right) \end{matrix}}.} & (155) \end{matrix}$ The generated run-time values for rules for a disambiguation group may be kept in memory so as to avoid re-computation for frequent use. These may be deleted on end of program or updated when a branch count is updated. 4.7 Keeping the Trellis Sparse

Several observations and assumptions can be made to obtain a sparse trellis, cf. FIG. 10:

-   -   1. Do not store words with branches with reference count zero         and branches with no words.     -   2. Since the value of a reference count is useful only within a         disambiguation group, normalization may be occasionally applied         when any particular value exceeds the precision bits allocated.         This will lead to several counts becoming zero during the         normalization, which is a further source of sparseness. For         example, we may reserve 4 bits for the reference count, and         whenever a particular count exceeds 15 in a disambiguation         group, we divide each of the counts in the group by, say 8, and         then drop the counts that become 0. Clearly, there is a tradeoff         between performance and memory requirements here, and the two         parameters controlling it are the bits reserved for storage and         the factor by which a count is normalized. However, this         tradeoff need not be the same for all disambiguation groups. For         offline training, one may identify several “highly ambiguous”         groups and assign greater precision to them for a much improved         performance level. These parameters need to be determined         heuristically for offline training, while they may be fixed         arbitrarily for real-time processing. (Note that normalization         may not only be applied within a branch, as several derived rule         counts are derived from multiple branch information.)     -   3. The most effective means of gaining sparseness is perhaps the         following. We know that approximately 95% of the time the most         frequent word in a disambiguation group is the right choice.         Working from an assumption that we only need to use tag         information to improve on this performance level, the basic aim         of the compiled information is to determine whether a particular         other word is more likely than the most frequent word of the         disambiguation group in the given tag context. Thus, we do not         need information of branches that have reference counts that         indicate that the most frequent word is likely. A relatively         conservative way of ensuring this is to remove branches for         which the following is satisfied for all words in a         disambiguation group (calculated per branch):

$\begin{matrix} {\frac{{{Ref}.\mspace{14mu}{ct}.\mspace{14mu}{of}}\mspace{14mu}{most}\mspace{14mu}{frequent}\mspace{14mu}{word}}{{{Ref}.\mspace{14mu}{ct}.\mspace{14mu}{of}}\mspace{14mu}{word}} \geq \frac{{{Freq}.\mspace{14mu}{of}}\mspace{14mu}{most}\mspace{14mu}{frequent}\mspace{14mu}{word}}{{{Freq}.\mspace{14mu}{of}}\mspace{14mu}{word}}} & (156) \end{matrix}$

-   -   4. The above has a very important implication. We do not need to         carry a branch for a scanned word that does not already exist in         the trellis if the scanned word is the one with the highest         frequency in the disambiguation group. Thus, for 95% of the         words scanned, we will not be generating new branches. Note,         however, that for every such word scanned, we will have to check         if a branch already exists, and, in that case, increment the         corresponding reference count for that branch.     -   5. Note that scanning of words with the highest frequency in a         group will also lead to situations where the condition (156)         will be true and thus further sparseness will result.     -   6. Furthermore, we may apply a limiting restriction to the         maximum number of branches (or, alternatively, maximum memory)         that a disambiguation group might have. This is determined on         the basis of the ambiguity of a group and will in general be         proportional to the number of words in a group. To carry out         such “trimming” of the trellis, one must give preference to new         branches that have information greater than or equal to other         branches that leads to choosing an alternative to the most         frequent word. This calculation may be simplified by comparing         the following ratio for two branches:

$\begin{matrix} {\frac{\begin{matrix} {{Highest}\mspace{14mu}{reference}\mspace{14mu}{count}\mspace{14mu}{excluding}} \\ {{that}\mspace{14mu}{of}\mspace{14mu}{the}\mspace{14mu}{most}\mspace{14mu}{frequent}\mspace{14mu}{word}} \end{matrix}}{\begin{matrix} {{Greater}\mspace{14mu}} \\ \left( {1,{{Reference}\mspace{14mu}{count}\mspace{14mu}{of}\mspace{14mu}{the}\mspace{14mu}{most}\mspace{14mu}{frequent}\mspace{14mu}{word}}} \right) \end{matrix}}.} & (157) \end{matrix}$

-   -   7. Note that if we have to carry out trimming when we are adding         a new branch, then we simply need to remove a branch with the         lowest ratio provided it is less than or equal to 1.     -   8. When we trim a branch we are also taking away information         that may actually lead to a useful derived rule. To keep this         information, we use the empty tags. Whenever we remove a branch,         say (t1 to t2), with both tags non-empty, we must create or         increment the counts of branches (t1 to empty) and (empty to t2)         by the same amounts removed.         4.8 Benefits

The following are some of the benefits of the approach described above.

-   -   Fast run-time disambiguation.     -   Limited storage requirements. Storage limits can be arbitrarily         specified.     -   Very flexible approach. Extensive manual/automatic customization         and rule setting depending on ambiguity of the group possible.     -   Finite precision handling included and used to promote greater         sparseness.     -   Non-Markov rules are seamlessly applied.     -   Conditioning word probability over previous tags is more         efficient than conditioning tag probabilities over previous tags         and then summing up.     -   Common approach to offline and run-time training.         4.9 Modification

From experimental results, it seems that a compact disambiguation system that uses tag information may get most of its error reduction from the previous word tag information. If only this information is to be stored as part of the prior statistics then tremendous simplifications are entailed, both in storage and computation. This subsection outlines the method for that simplified system. Apart from that, the following additional changes are made.

-   -   Words scanned in training with no previous words are designated         with the “empty” previous word tag.         FIGS. 11, 12, 13, and 14 are analogous to FIGS. 7, 8, 9, 10.         4.10 Automatic Tag Grouping

There are also other NLP techniques, used previously for speech processing, that are applicable to text input disambiguation, cf. [39]. In particular, decision trees that minimize the entropy of disambiguation can be very useful in automatic tag grouping. It is clear from experiments that different groupings can be favorable for different collision groups. A method to automatically identify these groups will lead to a more compact representation per given error reduction.

For our purpose, we can apply the basic principle of trying to reduce the uncertainty in disambiguation output while seeking a more compact representation. Starting from the most granular tags, we may tackle the representation problem when data storage exceeds a specified value. Then, we can work through an inverted decision tree and combine finer tag groups into coarser ones until the data storage requirement is achieved. The selection of tag groups to combine should be one that leads to a least overall gain in entropy of the disambiguation output conditioned on the prior model. We can easily work through a constrained inverted tree that only allows grouping of specified tag groups into coarser ones, e.g., combination of all AJ* groups into AJ, combination of N N1 and N N2 into N N, etc.

5 Display Optimization and Cost Functions

5.1 An Outline of the Display Optimization Problem

When using a reduced keyboard like the One-Row Keyboard, the user does not obtain perfect feedback about the progress of the input process. The visual feedback may not produce the letter or symbol that the user has in mind and the screen may keep changing, some times displaying the intended symbol and some times not. A major challenge for these reduced keyboards is then to provide feedback to the user that to the greatest extent possible will allow the user to keep the input process in the background and minimize the amount of focus of attention that the input process requires. Here we shall consider the aspect of this problem involving the visual feedback and what to display on the screen of the device as the input process proceeds.

5.2 Cost Function Heuristics

There is probably no way to establish a cost function that quantifies the user experience exactly. However, let us try to quantify some heuristics for how the input experience of a reduced keyboard compares with the input process using the regular, full keyboard. As the user inputs characters on the regular keyboard, the screen “immediately” displays the letters or symbols that have been keyed in. Similarly, if a certain key is hit on the reduced keyboard and results in the intended letters (assuming that the user always hits the intended key and that there is no “typo”) being displayed, the associated cost is defined to be 0. On the other hand, if the last key entry results in one of the displayed letters or symbols being different than the intended combination, then it may be reasonable to assume that the associated cost is 1 and this cost is then added to the cost of the input process before reaching the current position. As the user hits the space bar to indicate that the signature input has reached the intended end (or any other key used for that purpose), we obtain a total cost. This generates a total cost function C¹ defined for each legal entry.

There are several other cost functions that seem reasonable as well. For example, suppose we only check if the last entered character results in a display that coincides with the intended symbol, and we assign a cost of 1 if it is not and 0 if it is. In particular, we do not look at the entire expression obtained so far, only the last entered character. Adding up all those costs as we reach the end for a given valid combination defines another total cost function C² also defined on the collection of legal entries.

Both C¹ and C² satisfy that the cost of the input process for the regular keyboard is always 0. It seems that C² is a little simpler, but that C¹ probably more accurately reflects the user experience.

Perhaps the user experience is such that if there is a character combination on the screen and this combination differs from the intended one in n places, then the anxiety or concern that it causes is more adequately reflected by a (differential) cost of n, then we may define yet another total cost function C³ obtained by summing up these differential costs.

Another possibility is to not go through these differential cost functions at all. For example, suppose the cost for a given valid combination of n characters is simply if this combination shows up after the n:th keystroke (without the space character or whatever is used to indicate completion of the input process for that valid character combination). Then we have yet another cost function C⁴. This cost function is perhaps appropriate for the user who knows what he is inputting and trusts the application. So, he is not going to seriously consider the visual feedback and be alarmed by it until he has reached the end of the word.

Suppose we go back to the definition of the cost function C¹. If the user keeps on typing and the intended symbol is not displayed, then the cost goes up with 1 each time this happens. So, if the desired character combination fails to show up say three times in a row, then the cost goes up by 3. More generally if the incorrect display is obtained n times in a row, then the added cost is n. In this sense, this cost function is linear as a function of the “delay.” It may be more accurate to model the user's experience by some other dependency on this n. For example, we may assume a quadratic dependency so that the differential cost after n incorrect displays is n², and then as soon as the intended combination shows up on the screen the differential cost is set back to 0. This defines yet another cost function C^(1,(2)) (where the (2) indicates the quadratic nature of the cost's dependency on the “delay”). Similar modifications of the other cost functions can also be defined.

Another type of modification of these cost functions is the following. To be specific, let us consider C¹ again. Suppose we now distinguish two types of costs. In addition to the cost of 1 each time the intended character combination fails to show up, we can also assign a cost a (with a≧0) for each user action to display another character combination, consistent with the signature up to that point. Then if it takes k such actions (perhaps key clicks or down arrows), then the additional differential cost is ka. In this way, we obtain a more general class of cost functions C¹(a) with C¹(0)=C¹. By adjusting the value of a, we can model how much we believe the effort to adjust the displayed character combinations impacts the user's experience.

Similar modifications of the other cost functions are also possible.

There are certainly other aspects that may be interesting to take into consideration when defining a cost function. Different words and letter combinations have different probabilities for being mistyped. This can also easily be incorporated into the definition of a cost function. Another related effect that may be interesting to model is that with a reduced keyboard it becomes particularly challenging to keep track of the number of times in a row a certain key has been hit. So, when the signature remains the same even when the intended letter changes it is easy to introduce a typo. Hence, one would expect the user to have to allocate more attention to those situations unless the feedback is accurate. With this in mind, we can, for instance, assign a quadratic differential cost function not to a general delay as in the definition of C^(1,(2)), but rather only when the signature remains the same in consecutive key strokes. The total cost function with this modification is denoted by {tilde over (C)}₁ ⁽²⁾.

5.3 Beginning of Words with Path Ordering is Not Optimal

Let us assume that we are using a standard dictionary with frequency of use information for each word. This makes it possible to calculate the path probabilities for any given signature sequence and for any beginning of word or legal combination. Hence, it becomes possible to order each of the character combinations in order of most likely to least likely interpretation of a given (partial) signature. If the decision of what to display on the screen and in a possible alternatives region is based on that order (with the most likely appearing on the screen, say, and alternatives possibly displayed consistently with the ordering), then we shall say we are using the path ordered Beginning of Words (BOW/po) approach. (Note that this is a misnomer since a BOW may not actually be the beginning of a word, just a valid combination of characters.)

Although the BOW/po seems like an efficient procedure for the display, we shall next show that it is in fact sub-optimal for the cost function C³. The example will make it clear that BOW/po is quite often sub-optimal.

We start by observing that the values of the different cost functions also depend on the dictionary used, not just the display routines (and of course the combination the cost function is being evaluated for). We shall proceed by finding a small dictionary for which BOW/po is sub-optimal when the cost function C³ is used. We shall not be concerned with the interpretation of the dictionary entries as words in any natural language. We are interested in understanding the underlying phenomena that cause a display procedure to be an optimal solution or not.

EXAMPLE 5.1

Let the dictionary consist of three words, each one with two letters. Let the three words be aa bb bc  (158) Suppose the keyboard has all three letters on one key: [abc]. Let us further assume that the probabilities of the words are as follows: P(aa)=0.4 P(bb)=0.39 P(bc)=0.21.  (159) Then the BOW/po results in “b” first being displayed as the user hits the key, and then as the user hits it a second time “aa” is displayed, and finally as he hits the space bar “aa” remains on the screen. The average total cost C ₃(BOW/po) for this three-word based dictionary is 0.4×1+0.4×0+0.6×0+0.39×2+0.21×2+0.4×0+0.39×2+0.21×2=2.8.  (160) On the other hand, if we use a different display algorithm, we can achieve a lower cost. More specifically, suppose we first display “b” as before, then “bb”, and let “bb” remain on the screen when the space bar is hit. Then the average total cost C ₃(BOW/mod) is 0.4×1+0.6×0+0.4×2+0.39×0+0.21×1+0.4×2+0.39×0+0.21×1=2.42.  (161) 5.4 A General Class of Display Algorithms

In this subsection, we shall identify a useful, general class of display procedures that includes BOW/po as well as many others. The rationale behind this class is based on the assumption that the user inputs key by key, moving from the left to the right of the signature corresponding to the intended character combination. Eventually he reaches the end of the intended combination, and at that point we assume that he hits a space bar. If we are really trying hard to avoid changes on the screen, we may decide to suppress updating the screen every second time or something similar. However, our class of display algorithms will not allow this, and we shall assume that the screen is updated with a new combination after each keystroke.

It is certainly possible to introduce display procedures that take sophisticated considerations like grammar, previous words, etc., into account. Here we shall not do that, but we shall only assume that the display depends on the keystrokes (i.e., the signature) and the dictionary of valid combinations, and that we update the screen after each keystroke with a combination. The input process ends, and a new one starts, after the space bar is hit. These considerations are behind the definition of display algorithm we shall consider here. We shall use the notation B for this class, and a specific procedure is denoted by B.

To be more precise, we shall look more carefully at BOW, and introduce some appropriate definitions and notation.

Let the dictionary D of valid character combinations be fixed, and assume that each such combination ends with a space character (the exact delimiter is of no importance). From the dictionary D we derive the collection of beginnings of valid character combinations, and this collection is denoted by D, BOW(D), or, as we have done up until now, BOW.

Because of the step-by-step assumption about the input process, the classes of truncated character combinations are useful: We let #w be the length of the character combination w ε D, i.e., the number of characters in w. We also let # D=max{#w: w ε D} be the length of the longest character combination in D. We define D _(i) to be the collection of all character combinations from D of length i, i=1, . . . , #D. In this way, D=∪_(i) D _(i), and D _(i) ₁ ∩ D _(i) ₂ =∅, i₁≠i₂.  (162)

We denote the collection of all valid signatures, corresponding to combinations in D, by S. Similarly, all valid signatures of length i are collected in S _(i), i.e., S _(i) consists of all signature of the combinations in D _(i), i=1, . . . , # D. If we also let D(σ) be all the combinations in D with signature σ, then we have D=∪ _(i)∪_(σε S) _(i) D (σ) D _(i)=∪_(σε S) _(i) D (σ) D (σ₁)∩ D (σ₂)=∅, σ₁≠σ₂.  (163) The classes D(σ) are interesting since each contains the “collisions” we have for the corresponding signature σ.

Now, a display algorithm is simply a mapping B: S→ D that filters these classes in the sense that B S _(i)⊂ D _(i), i=1, . . . , # D.  (164) Hence, B(σ)ε D _(i), for each σε S _(i) , i=1, . . . , # D.  (165) The collection of all display algorithms is denoted by B. With B=BOW/po we certainly have B ε B.

As the user keeps entering the signature sequence corresponding to the intended word, he receives feedback on the screen. Using a display algorithm from the general class B, he receives this feedback after each keystroke, and the displayed character combination has as many characters as keystrokes (note that we are including the space bar, mostly for convenience). Hence, if the intended word has N+1 characters, counting the space character (or equivalent), we obtain a sequence of N+1 displayed character combinations, b_(i), i=1, . . . , N+1. Furthermore, #b _(i) =i, i=1, . . . , N+1.  (166) 5.5 A General Class of Cost Functions

The class of cost functions we shall consider is also quite general. At this point the ambition we have with these cost functions is to quantify the user experience as he (correctly) types in the different keystrokes corresponding to the intended word. For example, we could also try to measure how easy it is to detect common typos, or how easy it is to correct such mistakes, but that is not our goal at present.

Essentially, we are trying to capture the user's experience of the difference between what appears on the screen and what he ideally wants to see on the screen after each keystroke. With this in mind, it makes sense to first define what we mean by a differential (or incremental) cost function C_(i) at step i. The idea is for C_(i) to measure the cost of the difference after the i:th keystroke. So, if the user intends to type the valid letter combination w, and he after keystroke i, i=1, . . . , N+1, sees the character combination b_(i), then C_(i)(w, b_(i)) somehow should ideally reflect the user's experience at that point; a larger value of C_(i)(w, b_(i)) should hopefully correspond to a worse user experience.

A differential cost function at step i is now simply a non-negative function C_(i): D _(i)× D _(i)→[0, +∞) defined on pairs (u, v) of valid character combinations of length i: C _(i)(u,v)≧0, (u,v)ε D _(i) × D _(i).  (167)

For a valid character combination w ε D with signature σ, we let w^((i)) be the i first characters and, similarly, σ^((i)) be the signature of w^((i)), i=1, . . . , #w. Now, a total cost function is a non-negative function C: D× B→[0, +∞) that is defined through a collection of differential cost functions C_(i), i=1, . . . , #D by letting

$\begin{matrix} {{{C\left( {w,B} \right)} = {{\sum\limits_{i = 1}^{\# w}{{C_{i}\left( {w^{(i)},{B\left( \sigma^{(i)} \right)}} \right)}w}} \in {??}}},{B \in {\overset{\_}{\mathcal{B}}.}}} & (168) \end{matrix}$ 5.6 The Solution of the Display Optimization Problem

We shall assume that we are given a dictionary D of valid combinations and a specific cost function C. We shall also assume that we know the collection of all probabilities P={p(w)}_(wεD) of combinations in D. We let C_(avg)=C_(avg)(B) be the average total cost for all combinations in D using the display procedure B ε B. The display optimization problem of Subsection 5.1 can now be precisely stated as follows: find the solution B^(min) to the minimization problem min_(Bε B) C_(avg)(B).  (169)

In other words, the solution to the display optimization problem is the display algorithm B^(min) such that C _(avg)(B ^(min))=min_(Bε B) C _(avg)(B).  (170)

To solve this problem, we first observe that this is the same as solving each of the following problems for the differential cost functions C_(i), i=1, . . . , # D, associated with C: min_(Bε B) avg_(wε D) _(i) C_(i)(w,B(σ))  (171) where σ is the signature of w. Further untangling our notation, this is equivalent to solving min_(uε D(σ))avg_(wε D(σ))C_(i)(w,u) for each σε S _(i).  (172) In other words, fixing a general σ ε S _(i), to solve the display optimization problem we have to find the element u^(min)ε D(σ) for which avg_(wε D(σ)) C _(i)(w,u ^(min))=min_(uε D(σ))avg_(wε D(σ)) C _(i)(w,u).  (173) Once we find this u^(min)=u^(min)(σ), then the corresponding optimal display algorithm B^(min) is given by B ^(min)(σ)=u ^(min)(σ), σε S _(i)  (174) for i=1, . . . , # D.

This equation is in fact not hard to solve in general. However, let us still start with the easiest case. If we pick the cost function C¹, then due to the particular definition of this cost function (it is either 0 or 1 depending on whether the displayed u is the same as the intended combination), it is easy to see that the solution of (170) is B^(min)=BOW/po (for each fixed dictionary).

Going back to the general case (169) and its alternative formulation (172), we note that if we are given the probabilities P={p(w)}_(wεD) of the combinations in the dictionary D, then we can calculate all the probabilities P={ p(w)}_(wε D) of all the w ε D. Using the definition of the average (or expected value) over this probability distribution, we see that (172) is the same as

$\begin{matrix} {{\min_{u \in {\overset{\_}{??}{(\sigma)}}}{\sum\limits_{w \in {\overset{\_}{??}{(\sigma)}}}{{C_{i}\left( {w,u} \right)}{\overset{\_}{p}\left( {w\text{❘}\sigma} \right)}\mspace{14mu}{for}\mspace{14mu}{each}\mspace{14mu}\sigma}}} \in {{\overset{\_}{S}}_{i}.}} & (175) \end{matrix}$ Here p(w|σ) is the conditional probability of w, knowing that w ε D(σ):

$\begin{matrix} {{{\overset{\_}{p}\left( {w\text{❘}\sigma} \right)} = \frac{\overset{\_}{p}(w)}{\overset{\_}{p}(\sigma)}},{with}} & (176) \\ {{\overset{\_}{p}(\sigma)} = {{\overset{\_}{p}\left( {\overset{\_}{??}(\sigma)} \right)} = {\sum\limits_{w \in {\overset{\_}{??}{(\sigma)}}}{{\overset{\_}{p}(w)}.}}}} & (177) \end{matrix}$

The equation (175) thus shows that the solution to the display optimization problem is obtained by letting u^(min)(σ) be the smallest component of the vector obtained by applying the matrix C_(i)(σ)=(C_(i)(w, u))_(uε D(σ),wε D(σ)) to the vector of probabilities P(σ)=( p(w))_(wε D(σ)).

In the case of the cost function C¹, it is easily shown that this solution is in fact BOW/po.

EXAMPLE 5.2

In the case of the cost function C¹, the matrices C_(i) ¹(σ), σ ε S _(i), are particularly easy. All elements are 1 except for the diagonal where they are 0:

$\begin{matrix} {{C_{i}^{1}(\sigma)} = {\begin{pmatrix} 1 & 1 & \cdots & 1 \\ 1 & 1 & \cdots & 1 \\ \cdots & \cdots & \cdots & \cdots \\ 1 & 1 & \cdots & 1 \end{pmatrix} - \begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 & \cdots & 0 \\ 0 & 1 & \cdots & 0 \\ \cdots & \cdots & \cdots & \cdots \\ 0 & 0 & \cdots & 1 \end{pmatrix}}} & (178) \end{matrix}$

These are n×n matrices with n given by the number of elements in D(σ): n=# D(σ) (for each σ). Hence, the equation (175) in this case becomes

$\begin{matrix} {{\min_{u \in {\overset{\_}{??}{(\sigma)}}}{\sum\limits_{w \in {\overset{\_}{??}{(\sigma)}}}{\overset{\_}{p}(w)}}} - {{\overset{\_}{p}(u)}.}} & (179) \end{matrix}$ Since the sum of probabilities here is independent of u, the minimum value u^(min) is obtained for the component corresponding to the largest probability p(u). This is of course exactly BOW/po.

Let us also briefly reconsider Example 5.1.

EXAMPLE 5.3

Let us consider the small dictionary in Example 5.1 and the cost function C³. The three combinations aa, bb, and bc have the same signature (hitting the same key twice) and hence belong to the same D(σ). If we order these three elements with aa first, bb second, and bc last, then the cost matrix C=C₂ ³(σ) for that or is given by

$\begin{matrix} {{C = \begin{pmatrix} 0 & 2 & 2 \\ 2 & 0 & 1 \\ 2 & 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix}},} & (180) \end{matrix}$ and the vector of probabilities is

$\begin{matrix} {\;{{\overset{\_}{P} = {\begin{pmatrix} 0.4 \\ 0.39 \\ 0.21 \end{pmatrix}.{So}}},}} & (181) \\ {{{C\overset{\_}{P}} = \begin{pmatrix} 1.6 \\ 1.01 \\ 1.19 \end{pmatrix}},} & (182) \end{matrix}$ and the smallest component u^(min) of this vector is the second, corresponding to the combination bb, u^(min)=bb. This is consistent with the choice we made back in Example 5.1. 5.7 Optimal Display of Alternatives

In the previous section we have shown how to obtain the optimal combination to display when the user has hit certain keys. Of course, often the keystrokes and the corresponding signatures do not identify the intended character combinations uniquely, and then the displayed combination is only the best in a probabilistic sense, with the lowest average cost (with respect to the selected differential cost function). Of course, the user may very well have intended a different combination than what is displayed on the screen. In this subsection, we shall look at what to bring up next, after the optimal solution has been displayed and is rejected by the user. Further, if that alternative is also rejected by the user, then what combination shall come up after that, and so on.

We shall assume that the user has typed in a signature σ, i.e., a sequence of keystrokes, and that one of the combinations u ε D(σ) has been displayed. Since u is the first to be displayed, we shall use the notation u⁽⁰⁾; it is also convenient to set D ⁽⁰⁾(σ)= D(σ). If the user inspects this u⁽⁰⁾ and decides to discard it, the collection of the remaining valid combinations with that signature is D ⁽¹⁾(σ)= D ⁽⁰⁾(σ)\{u ⁽⁰⁾}.  (183) We are again interested in the optimal display algorithm, now conditioned on the extra information that u⁽⁰⁾ is not the intended letter combination. This translates into finding another optimal combination u⁽¹⁾ε D ⁽¹⁾(σ). The optimality may be measured with a potentially different cost function.

This process is then repeated recursively. Let J=J(σ)=# D(σ) (σ is fixed). From u^((j)) and D ^((j)), j=0, . . . , J−1, we obtain D ^((j+1))(σ)= D ^((j))(σ)\{u ^((j)) }= D (σ){u ⁽¹⁾ , . . . , u ^((j)) }, j=0, . . . , J−1.  (184) Note that # D ^((j))(σ)=J−j, and in particular, the last set D ^((J)) is empty.

At each step, a different cost function may be utilized if we believe that the user experience is better reflected in that way. Also, once we know that an intended element is not D ^((j−1))(σ), then the conditional probabilities for the remaining elements in D ^((j)), j=0, . . . , J−1, takes this into account. At each step, these conditional probabilities differ by a simple scaling factor. More precisely, let

$\begin{matrix} {\;{{{\overset{\_}{p}}^{(0)}(w)} = {\overset{\_}{p}\left( {{w\left. {w \in {\overset{\_}{??}(\sigma)}} \right)} = {\overset{\_}{p}\left( {w\left. \sigma \right){and}} \right.}} \right.}}} & (185) \\ {{{\overset{\_}{p}}^{(j)}(w)} = {\overset{\_}{p}\left( {{w\left. {w \in {{\overset{\_}{??}}^{(j)}(\sigma)}} \right)},{j = 0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},{{J - {1{for}\mspace{14mu} j}} = 0},\ldots\mspace{11mu},{J - {1.\mspace{14mu}{Then}}}} \right.}} & (186) \\ {\;{{{\overset{\_}{p}}^{(j)}(w)} = \left\{ \begin{matrix} 0 & {{{{if}\mspace{14mu} w} \notin {\overset{\_}{??}}^{(j)}},} \\ {\frac{1}{\;{\overset{\_}{p}\left( {\overset{\_}{??}}^{(j)} \right)}}{\overset{\_}{p}(w)}} & {{{if}\mspace{14mu} w} \in {{\overset{\_}{??}}^{(j)}.}} \end{matrix} \right.}} & (187) \end{matrix}$

Now, to determine the optimal elements u^((j)) to display with this successive additional information, we may proceed as before by using the analog of the equation (175) (with the cost function and the conditional probabilities replaced in the obvious way).

We have now solved the full display problem, both the problem of what to display initially and then in what order to display the alternatives. The solution to the initial display optimization problem provides a display algorithm B, i.e., a mapping B: S→ D that

$\begin{matrix} {\;{\overset{\_}{S} \ni {\sigma\overset{B}{\rightarrow}u} \in {{\overset{\_}{??}(\sigma)}.}}} & (188) \end{matrix}$ The solution to the full display problem extends this. For each signature σ ε S, the full solution defines a vector B(σ) consisting of all elements in D(σ) ordered with respect to the cost functions used. Hence,

$\begin{matrix} {{\overset{\_}{S} \ni {\sigma\overset{\overset{\rightarrow}{B}}{\rightarrow}\begin{pmatrix} u^{(0)} \\ u^{(1)} \\ \vdots \\ u^{({J - 1})} \end{pmatrix}}},} & (189) \end{matrix}$ where u^((j))ε D(σ), j=0, . . . , J and J=J(σ)=# D(σ). We refer to the mapping {right arrow over (B)} as a full display algorithm, and u⁽⁰⁾ is the initial display and the elements u⁽¹⁾ . . . , u^((J−1)) are the alternatives.

We remark that the overall cost function that determines a display algorithm may be a composite of various individual cost functions. For instance, variations may be used not only before and after certain keystrokes (such as space) are entered, but also for different ordering rank in the alternatives presented.

5.8 A Note on Display Optimization, Approximate Typing, and NLP Considerations

In the previous sections, we have often used maximum likelihood considerations for resolving ambiguities and for assessing what alternatives to present to the user. As we have seen, this often amounts to basing decisions on the most frequently occurring character combinations. It is clear that these types of considerations can instead be based on the appropriately defined cost functions. In particular, the techniques we have developed for approximate typing (including automatic error correction and auto-completion) and improved ambiguity resolution using NLP techniques both have direct analogs based on cost functions and the methods described above. These are practically realized by using the generated cost measures as a replacement of the frequency measures involved in these techniques.

6 Variations of the One-Row Keyboard

6.1 Consistency Among Keyboards

The ORK can be implemented in a variety of ways. Two of the distinguishing qualities of the ORK are the reduction in size compared to a regular keyboard and the consistency with the QWERTY keyboard.

The reduction in size is a result of collapsing several characters, with separate keys on the convential keyboard, onto the same key. There are several interesting keyboards between the most sophisticated ORK-type keyboards and the regular keyboard. For example, we may collapse more than three rows onto one row. As an illustration of this, let us assume that we decide to include not just the three letter rows of the standard keyboard, but also include the top (fourth) row of symbols and numbers. On this ORK-type keyboard, the entry process is more ambiguous and the disambiguation part becomes more demanding. However, the basic principles remain the same, and no significant additions to the techniques are necessary. In the opposite direction, we do not have to include all the characters of the standard keyboard even from the three rows we considered above. For example, by moving the punctuation marks to other keys or to a multi-step process on some key(s), the disambiguation process (typically) becomes simpler, but that version of the ORK provides less support for the user's touch-typing and re-uses less of the user's experience and training.

The ORK's consistency with the QWERTY keyboard also ranges over a spectrum of possibilities. This consistency between two (possibly) reduced keyboards is a measure of how well the user's familiarity with one of the keyboards can be transferred to the other. For example, if the same finger and essentially the same action on that finger is used on two different reduced keyboards, then there is some level of consistency between the two. Further, if all keys correspond to the same fingers and the actions associated with key presses are similar, then there is probably a high degree of consistency between them, making it quite easy to switch from one to the other. This consistency becomes more important for keys and actions that are commonly used. The interruption caused by using an unusual key or action has less of an impact on the user's experience.

A basic QWERTY keyboard consists of the letters of the alphabet (to keep it specific let us assume the English alphabet although the reasoning applies for all other alphabets as well) in one case (upper or lower) arranged in three rows and with a standard layout for the individual keys. There are then many variations and extensions of this basic QWERTY:

EXAMPLE 6.1

a) The upper and lower case QWERTY keyboard includes both upper and lower case, typically accessing the upper case by pressing the Shift key(s).

b) The upper and lower case QWERTY keyboard with punctuation marks includes common punctuation marks (, . / ? < > ; :) on some keys. Here the symbols < > are probably the least commonly used and, hence, it may have little impact on the user experience if they are replaced or re-located.

c) The upper and lower case QWERTY keyboard with punctuation marks and symbols/numbers typically has a fourth row for symbols/numbers.

d) The most common QWERTY-type keyboards are slight variations of the one in FIG. 32 (one for the lower case and one for the upper case, typically accessed through the Shift key).

There are then several possible reasons why a reduced keyboard may only be partially consistent with a QWERTY keyboard. For example, some of the characters from the QWERTY keyboard may be missing or assigned to unusual (non-consistent) fingers and positions. It may also be a consequence of the fact that touch-typing requires re-training or is difficult because different user actions and patterns are required.

To allow for QWERTY typing on a reduced keyboard, we want at least the basic letters to be consistent, i.e., it is desirable for the reduced keyboard to at least be consistent with the minimal QWERTY keyboard.

The more consistency we can achieve between a new (reduced) keyboard and a keyboard that a user is already trained to use, the easier it is for the user to learn the new one. However, there may be other considerations (such as the performance of the disambiguation process or the size of the new keyboard) that make it more desirable to design the new keyboard for less consistency.

The ORK belongs to a general class of reduced keyboards that are at least consistent with the minimal QWERTY keyboard and hence partially consistent with the different QWERTY keyboards in the above examples. The keyboards in this class reduce the size of the QWERTY keyboard by mapping some characters that are assigned to different keys on the QWERTY keyboard to one key. For example, if we collapse the top and middle rows of QWERTY keys onto one row and keep the third row, we obtain a two-row keyboard and a reduced keyboard in this class. Or, we can collapse four rows, the three letter rows as well as the fourth symbol/number row (present on most QWERTY keyboards) onto one row, and also obtain a keyboard in this class.

For any of these ORK-type, “collapsed QWERTY keyboards,” the techniques and considerations of the descriptions (for disambiguation, approximate typing, spell mode, display algorithms, etc.) we have provided apply. And with minimal changes, we may also obtain small keyboard versions of other, large keyboards such as the Dvorak keyboard or keyboards for one-handed operation, etc.

6.2 The ORK System

The considerations concerning consistency also apply to the various control keys that the user is accustomed to. For example, the Space bar is used very often, and it is typically operated with the thumbs. So, it is important to maintain consistency for this key. Similarly, the Shift, Backspace, and Enter keys are also important keys from this point of view. Of course, there are also more specialized environments that different users may be trained for, and these may then lead to different placement of the QWERTY keys as well as various control keys. In FIG. 31, we illustrate one possibility for arranging the keys on the ORK, including a set of control keys. Notice that even actions such as “Control-C” (for “copy”), “Control-V” (for “paste”), etc., may be supported quite consistently with the normal Windows shortcut keys on a standard keyboard. This illustration also includes keys that address the operation of a standard cellphone (see “alt” labels on arrow keys). There are keys for “menu,” “left soft key,” “select,” and “right soft key” (from left to right).

Since the ORK is a reduced keyboard, the user input is, of course, typically ambiguous. Hence, the ORK system will include a disambiguation unit (DU). This unit translates the user input into actual character combinations. There are many possible approaches available here. Previous DU:s have required exact entry of keystrokes, and now the more powerful DU:s support approximate typing and allow the user to make mistakes. The DU may change depending on context, and this can, for example, be supported by allowing different dictionaries for different contexts (such as a new programming environment or an address book). The DU may even dynamically change dictionaries depending, for instance, on the user's profile or recently received documents, etc. The DU may also support auto-completion, reference look-up, and other more sophisticated capabilities. The DU thus relies on a processor (general purpose and/or dedicated) being available as well as long-term (for dictionaries, transition tables, etc.) and short-term memories (for run-time assembly and operations).

The output from the DU may be presented on a screen or possibly in audible form. So in its basic form, the ORK system will also include a screen to present the output to the user and make it possible for the user to provide feedback to the DU via the keys on the ORK. It may also make sense to present some of this user interaction to the system via voice-activated commands (a good example, which is easy for a voice-recognition, is “Next”/ “Previous”).

6.3 Communication and Power

There are several options for constructing an operational ORK system. One possibility is to create a separate, free-standing, small ORK keyboard where some components of the overall ORK system are packaged with the physical keyboard and others possibly reside on another main device. This type of arrangement makes it easy to utilize the capabilities of the main device such as CPU, power supply, screen, and memory. As a consequence, only parts of the overall system, or perhaps at least simpler versions, may be necessary on the separate keyboard part.

Of course, with a separate physical keyboard it becomes necessary to solve the communication with the main device. Here it is possible to use both wired solutions, when the keyboard is hooked up to the main device via a cable, or wireless solutions. The exact choice of several options available depends on the exact power requirements, size, speed of communication, etc. By using Bluetooth for a wireless solution, the radio part (transmitter and receivers) of the overall ORK system can be implemented with a small form factor and low power consumption, while sufficient bandwidth for the keyboard operation can easily be obtained. An IR-based system is also possible.

By making the ORK into a wireless device, there is also the possibility of utilizing different capabilities of other devices. For example, the ORK may communicate with a remote large screen when such a screen is available.

It is of course also possible to integrate the ORK directly with a main device. We shall go through several options below. Obviously, the communication between the different ORK components and the main device, re-use of the main device components, and whether these components are implemented in software and/or hardware depend upon particular device considerations.

We also remark that there is the possibility of having both a separate keyboard as well as an integrated one: a detachable keyboard achieves this; cf. FIGS. 36 a-b and also FIGS. 46 a-b.

When the keyboard is integrated with the device, we expect the power supply for the keyboard to be provided through the main device. For a separate or detachable keyboard, however, we must consider this issue. If it is a wired keyboard, then there is the possibility of still obtaining the necessary power from the main device through the wiring. For example, the standard USB connection provides such a solution. For a wireless keyboard, there is the need for some type of power supply on the keyboard. Obviously, we can arrange this through standard batteries, rechargeable batteries, or through a connection to an external power source. The keyboard does not require much power, especially if some of the main components are located on another device. In such cases, it may be possible to use the mechanical energy generated by the keystrokes to obtain at least part of the necessary power.

6.4 Type of Keyboard

To obtain consistency with QWERTY-type keyboards, the placement of the keys on the ORK is important, but there is still a great deal of flexibility. We have mentioned that some keys, especially among the control keys, have less of an impact on touch-typing and the speed of entry, and, hence, these keys can be placed more arbitrarily. However, even among the basic keys of the ORK that provide the consistency with QWERTY typing, we may adjust the placement to address various needs. This may, for instance, be used to make the basic shape of the ORK (with or without control keys) more ergonomic: In analogy with the “natural keyboard,” we may use a V-shaped design for the rows to more closely reflect the natural typing position. Combined with the small finger movements of the ORK, this creates an effective, ergonomic keyboard.

The shapes of the individual keys are also of interest. Since the standard keyboard's rows have been collapsed, the targeting of each key is greatly simplified; the experience is now somewhat analogous to playing a piano. In particular, the reduced interference due to the absence of neighboring keys in the vertical direction may be used to decrease the size of the keys in that direction or extend to the edge of the device.

If the ORK is implemented with more than one row, all rows are typically located in approximately the same plane, like the rows on a standard keyboard. It is worthwhile to note that there may be situations when there is a benefit to placing some of the keys in a different plane than the main keys; see FIGS. 35-36 for examples where the ORK is integrated with a device (or detachable). By placing some of the important control keys in a plane almost perpendicular to the main row, the size of ORK may be decreased, at least in some of its dimensions. In this example, the Space bar and some of the other frequently used control keys are intended to be operated with the user's thumbs while the remaining keys are still available for the other fingers and touch-typing. Additionally, the main row of the ORK may be operated with the thumbs as well, while the device is held by the palms and not supported by a surface.

While the ORK is not being used, it may be desirable to make it foldable to further reduce the size. This folding may be accomplished in a number of ways, not just by folding it in half. If the ORK is folded in such a way that the keys end up on the inside, then we may reduce the thickness of the folded unit by depressing the keys during the folding operation.

Today there are many variations of the standard keyboard. Devices like PDAs, cellphones, etc., are often equipped with virtual keyboards, displayed on a screen. The keyboards can be operated via a stylus (in case of touch-screens), via a navigational pad, or via an external device like a mouse. Of course, the ORK-type keyboards have similar counterparts. The benefit of using the ORK in this context is mainly the reduced targeting necessary and also its size.

Projected keyboards make up another class of virtual keyboards. These, in contrast to the screen virtual keyboards, typically support regular touch-typing. There are several companies offering such solutions:

-   -   Virtual Devices in Pittsburgh, Pa. (The Hampton Township, Pa.),         at virtualdevices.net;     -   Developer VKB Inc. in Jerusalem, Israel, at vkb.co.il;     -   Canesta in San Jose, Calif., at canesta.com.

For example, the Integrated Canesta Keyboard is based on a controller and two optical components that project the image of a keyboard onto any flat surface and use a light source to track the movement of fingers on that image.

By replacing the projected image of the regular keyboard by the ORK, we obtain new versions of these. The interesting point here is that the motion necessary for tracking is significantly simpler for the ORK than for the regular keyboard, since essentially only one row needs tracking. In fact, if we simply draw an ORK keyboard on a surface and use a sensor (such as a digital camera with modest video capability) to track the motion associated with the fingers, we have a very simple projected keyboard solution.

The basic surface of the keyboard can also be flexible, making it possible, for instance, to roll up the keyboard when it is not in use. Of course, this is also possible for the ORK.

There are also a number of glove-type implementations of the regular keyboard, also capable of touch-typing. Each of these have straight-forward ORK analogs. Here are a couple of references to different possibilities:

-   -   Senseboard Technologies based in Stockholm, Sweden, at         senseboard.com; and     -   Kitty, University of California in Irvine, at kittytech.com.

We also point out that there are analogs of the ORK for the “half keyboard” variation of the standard keyboard; cf. [44], [45], and [16].

6.5 Integrated Solutions

The ORK is small enough to integrate with a number of different types of portable devices.

In order to make the overall device smaller, one of the commonly used approaches is to make it foldable. The so-called clam shell design typically assumes that the device is used in portrait mode. The ORK can be integrated with such devices in a number of different ways; see FIGS. 33 a-c, 34 a-b for some examples.

If the device instead is intended mainly for use in landscape mode, then there are other implementations of the ORK; see FIGS. 35 and 36 a-b, and also FIGS. 46 a-b.

Another approach for reducing the size of the device is to let two parts of the device slide against each other; see FIG. 37 for an example including the ORK.

6.6 The Two-Thumb ORK

The reduced need for targeting on the ORK we mentioned above is a significant advantage. If we give up on the regular touch-typing with all fingers and, hence, some of the consistency with the QWERTY keyboard, and instead design the ORK for two-thumb typing, then the ORK can be made extremely small. The two-thumb ORK is not only small, but because of the reduced need for targeting, touch-typing with the thumbs is quite nice. The consistency with QWERTY typing is still considerable, and this two-thumb typing is easy to learn. The two-thumb ORK is possible to use while supporting the device with the hands.

The two-thumb ORK may also be implemented as a separate device, integrated with a main device, or as a detachable keyboard.

In order to make the main device really small, the two-thumb version of the ORK offers several integration possibilities, see FIGS. 38-44 and 46 a-b. Just as for the regular ORK, there are a number of variations: folded, slidable, wireless/wired, etc. In FIG. 44, the one row of the basic keys has been somewhat deformed to make the horizontal width of the ORK smaller and instead utilize the vertical space available. Note, however, that the left-to-right ordering of the keys is still maintained in this configuration. For the device in this figure, the use of the ORK may be to assist a search based on the signature of items in a database or on a menu.

There are some interesting implications of the two-thumb ORK design. The small size makes character entry feasible on several new classes of devices. Another benefit is that the keys are so small that it is possible to associate a screen area directly with each key, even on a small portable device. This makes it easy to re-label the keys, and this in turn makes it feasible to dynamically change the key actions; see FIG. 38.

This dynamic re-labeling is, of course, not restricted to just the keys corresponding to the basic letter keys. For example, in FIGS. 38-40 we have used keys to the left of the screen for some of the control functions. With such an arrangement, we may then re-label these physical keys along the left side of the screen (“y-direction”) as well as the ones at the bottom of the screen (“x-direction”). This has many potential uses. One is to associate a grid on the screen with a pair of keys, similar to how areas on a map are identified with labels on the x- and y-axes, respectively. If there are four keys along the y-axis and twelve along the x-axis, we may identify any of the 48 possible screen areas with a pair of keys. Hence, we can act on a particular area with the two corresponding keys, similar to the effect of a touch-screen. However, in contrast to the touch-screen, with the physical keys we have the advantage that minimal visual feedback is required. Hence, this key arrangement is preferable for many portable devices. In FIG. 41, we have illustrated the use of this type of grid in the case of map navigation, and, in FIG. 42, we show how depressing two keys can be used to identify a particular icon on the screen.

The labels do not always need to be displayed. This may be a user option, for instance, ranging from full labels or abbreviated labels to fully hidden ones. Options may also include different font sizes and color schemes.

Let us point out that dynamic re-labeling of keys has been used before. Perhaps the most common use today is on ATM machines, where the physical keys are often explained on the screen, next to the keys. Another common instance is on cellphones, where the labels for the two soft keys are often dynamic and displayed on the screen. For other devices, there are also keys with LCD built into each key to make this re-labeling possible.

The regular ORK can be combined with the two-thumb ORK. In this way we may create a device that supports both fast QWERTY touch-typing as well as two-thumb typing. See FIGS. 43, 46 a-b and 48 a-b for examples. In these particular examples, it may be desirable to use the index fingers instead of the thumbs to manipulate some of the control keys below the main row of the regular ORK (for instance, the “next/previous” and “space” keys).

Finally, we also note that another possibility is to have a virtual ORK supported by a touch screen.

6.7 Non-Visual Feedback

The small size of the ORK in either of its configurations serves as one motivation for carefully looking at the size of the overall system used for text and data entry. The fact that touch-typing is well supported is an indication that the visual feedback may be needed less. Further, the visual feedback is one of the major obstacles for using a device while being mobile. Hence, size, mobility, and improved touch-typing prompt us to consider non-visual feedback for the entry system.

Similar considerations probably provide some of the reasons for introducing small headsets for cellphones, smartphones and other portable devices. These headsets are sometimes connected via a wire to a main device, but, at least more recently, they are using Bluetooth technology for communication. They typically provide both speaker and microphone for handling audio-based communication. One of the advantages of these are the hands-free operation they offer, and this may be significant when the user needs both hands for other activities (like driving a car). Used together with a cellphone, the cellphone becomes more of a transmitter/receiver unit, and as such it can reside elsewhere, such as on the user's belt or in a purse, etc. In this context, it is also worth noting that use of the speaker, which is the input portion of this type of system, seems to be associated with an adoption barrier since it requires the user to speak loudly without any apparent recipient. Also, for text applications (text messaging, word processing, composition of presentations, etc.) such a speaker-based input system is still insufficient due to difficulties with voice-to-text translation technology.

In a different direction, the tremendous popularity of text-based messaging applications such as email, SMS text messaging, and Instant Messaging also serve as a good indication of the type of interaction preferred by many users. These applications often involve significantly less formatting than traditional letters and, hence, the need for visual feedback is greatly reduced, both for input as well as output. One of the attractive features of text-based messaging is the ability to avoid direct interaction between the parties engaging in the communication, since this makes it possible for the user to choose the time of interaction.

A possibility is now to use a small portable keyboard like the ORK for the character-entry portion of a device or a communication system, and then utilize a speaker unit like the above-mentioned headsets for feedback and output (and possibly the microphone unit for some portions of the input process). For output that is initially text-based, we may add a text-to-voice translation mechanism to the overall input/output system. See FIG. 45. Many aspects of the interactions between a user and a device or communication system may then be handled by this type of system. We note that several components of the overall system may be located only in the proximity of the user and may in fact also be shared by several users. This is the case for a main transmitter/receiver unit, the CPU, main memory, or a screen if these can be accessed through a low-power communication solution (like Bluetooth or Wi-Fi) or through wires. The small keyboard thus serves as an advanced remote control with enhanced input/output capabilities. In FIGS. 46, 47 and 48 a-b we have illustrated a couple of different possibilities for ORK devices with the ORK unit detachable or separate.

The interaction between the user and the input/output system is thus handled through the small keyboard and the headset. For example, in the case of a cellphone, the user may dial a phone number using the keyboard, or by using the audio-feedback to look up the desired entry in an address book, or by voice commands (if a microphone is part of the system).

There is considerable flexibility in creating and presenting the audio-based feedback and output. Certain standard phrases may be pre-recorded. A text-to-voice/audio component may handle the more variable output often required by traditionally text-based applications. In searching through or reviewing larger text segments, variable playback speed may be used. In other contexts, it makes sense to base the review on shortcuts and partial descriptions. For example, searching in an address book may rely on just first names, nicknames, or initial characters of certain text segments.

7 Miscellaneous Observations and Comments

7.1 Auto-Completion

Short words often create ambiguities for any reduced keyboard and for the ORK in particular. At the other end of the spectrum, there is a sparsity of valid words and signatures, especially of the longer combinations, among the collection of all possibilities. As we have mentioned earlier, this sparsity can be exploited for auto-completion: after specifying the beginning of the word or the signature, the rest may be unique and hence it can be left to the device to automatically complete the input.

Auto-completion is useful for more situations than just where the beginning uniquely identifies the rest of the input. There are situations where the several characters at the beginning of the sequence are unique, but there are several possible endings. Similarly, there is a possibility that the intended signature can be completed without the word being uniquely identified. The device may then make a prediction as to what the likely set of characters may be and thereby still provide an auto-completion option to the user.

Another situation arises when there are several possible continuations of the input sequence, but the device may make a prediction as to what the likely set of characters may be. In such situations, auto-completion can also be useful.

We begin by limiting the search for auto-completion alternatives to the dictionary entries that satisfy the signature entered so far, and then we proceed as follows. At any given point in the signature entry process, there may be more than one dual signature sequence that, in combination with the entered signature, forms a full word or BOW arising from a valid dictionary entry. For each of these dual signature sequences, there will be zero or more completion alternatives that will satisfy the entered signature sequence as well as the dual signature sequence. (Zero for the case when the dual signature sequence will correspond to a full word only.) Thus, if we offer an auto-completion sequence to the user for each of these “duals” separately, the overall collection of available alternatives increases. These alternatives may then be presented to the user as he cycles through the duals of the entered signature.

The above determination of the auto-completion alternatives can be incorporated as part of the normal dictionary search that occurs on keystroke entry. At any given keystroke, the signature sequence so far is known and, hence, as one scans through the dictionary for matching dual signature sequences, one may also check the outlined criterion to find an auto-completion alternative for each possible dual signature sequence. These alternatives may then be stored and made available to the user as he cycles through the collection. This simultaneous scanning for multiple purposes is very efficient and decreases overall computation load on the processor.

When the user has already typed the delimiter after a sequence of signatures, it is clear that the end of the intended word has been reached, and no auto-completion offering will be useful. This information causes a redundancy that can be exploited for other uses. For instance, we can use the same mechanism for presenting alternatives and accepting these for both auto-completion and auto-correction. The auto-correction may then be offered only when the entire signature has been entered. The offering of auto-completion and auto-correction alternatives may be mutually exclusive in time for another reason: auto-correction alternatives may, for instance, be offered only if there is no matching dual signature sequence from the dictionary for the entered signature sequence, which of course never occurs for auto-completion.

Clearly, auto-completion alternatives that do not add much more information to the entered signature are not very useful. For instance, if only one character is remaining in a sequence of character entries, it may be easier to just type the remaining character rather than to use the auto-completion acceptance method. Also, it may distract the user from the general typing flow to see such short, non-useful alternatives on the display. Thus, we may require a minimum number of additional characters before alternatives are presented to the user. This not only improves the user experience, but it also helps us to quickly search the dictionary for auto-completion alternatives as we can directly eliminate the entries that do not meet the minimum additional characters criterion. An additional benefit is that by eliminating shorter entries, we can consider the longer, useful entries only in those cases. As a result, the number of useful alternatives actually increases.

7.2 Reference Lists

As we search for auto-completion alternatives, there are typically many valid character combinations consistent with the signature entered up to that point. For example, suppose the user is certain about the spelling of the beginning of a word, but needs assistance with the rest. In this situation and others, we may provide the user access to a list of such alternatives. Moreover, we may disregard the currently displayed word and offer the full set of alternatives consistent with the entered signature. We may additionally limit these alternatives based on frequency of use, recent use, or other factors. This is desirable if there are too many alternatives for a good user experience.

7.3 Predictions Based on Mixed Ambiguity

The dictionary used may be composed of characters/symbols that may or may not correspond to an ambiguously entered signature. It also possible to have a character/symbol in a dictionary correspond to both an ambiguously entered signature and an unambiguously entered input. Specifically of interest is the following scenario where we have two or more modes. In one or more modes, we use the ten keys for ambiguous signature entry and in other modes we use the ten keys for unambiguous entry only. The unambiguous entries may be for a numeric mode for characters 0 through 9 or for a symbol mode. In each of these modes, we may use additional input such as a Shift key press to create further sub-modes which need not be mutually exclusive in composition. Now, with a dictionary that supports all kinds of characters/symbols and entry modes as outlined above, we may use input from all modes to predict the final output presented to the user. For instance, for typing a word (abbreviation really) such as “Y2K,” one may use the standard ambiguous mode to enter “Y” and “K” while “2” may be entered in the numeric unambiguous mode. The disambiguation engine will still be able to predict the full sequence “Y2K” from the given input and dictionary. A possible optimization for dictionary storage that is helpful for storing and indexing characters which do not correspond to an ambiguous signature is the following: One may, for the purpose of indexing, assign a known signature and new dual to an unambiguously entered character. Since the index is composed for the known signatures (first four signatures in our specific case), we can now incorporate the new character in the dictionary without increasing the index size. For input purposes, the use of a common signature does not impose any additional requirements except a mapping between the two.

7.4 Prediction of the Case of Characters Typed

Unlike the QWERTY keyboard, the Shift key in the ORK is used not only for specifying the case of letters, but also to limit the set of duals corresponding to letters and non-letter characters. Further, depending on the case of characters entered so far, we may improve upon the auto-correction and auto-completion alternatives that may be offered. Specifically, if all signatures entered so far correspond to letters in a possible offering that are upper case, we may cause all the rest of the letters in the offering to also be upper case. In other instances, we simply let them be lower case. For instance, “Thistle” may be offered as the auto-completion alternative to “This” while “THISTLE” may be offered as the auto-completion alternative for “THIS.”

7.5 Locking of BOW

In some user typing scenarios, explicit feedback from the user regarding the validity of predicted, or otherwise entered, dual signatures is useful to capture and record as a “lock” on one or more of the duals of the character signatures entered up to that point. This “lock information” can then be used in additional typing to narrow down the search for alternatives (including auto-completion and auto-correction) to only those possible sequences that satisfy the lock. Two such specific instances are outlined below:

-   -   If the user pauses while entering a signature to cycle through         the alternatives, then the alternative cycled to must be         perceived as one the user is interested in and thus may be         locked.     -   If the user types something in an unambiguous mode or manner,         such as in numeric mode, then this should be locked. Further, at         this point it may be appropriate to lock the entire sequence         already typed. The reasoning behind this is that if a break in         touch-typing flow exists (by unambiguous entry), it is likely         that the user is confident in the sequence available so far.         7.6 Contextual Information

The effective auto-completion alternatives to use are often context dependent. For example, as the user enters an email address, the natural auto-completion alternatives may be those provided by his address book or by recently used email addresses. Or, if the user is entering text in a certain programming environment with specific technical words, then the best auto-completion alternatives may be quite different than when typing a general text.

This type of contextual information may be used for virtually all aspects of entry using a reduced keyboard, not just for auto-completion. We may have several dictionaries available, depending on the context, and entries in these dictionaries may be flagged so that the context is identified. Contexts and dictionaries can then be given different priorities at run-time, and the feedback to the user may then reflect this.

7.7 Nature of “Text”

The various discussions of “text” that we have had are generally understood to be composed of characters that may be letters or symbols. It is important to realize that, in fact, “text” is a misnomer here and really applies to all kinds of objects that the user input can be mapped to. For instance, a key on the keyboard may actually be mapped to a picture or graphic such as a “smiley face.” The disambiguation engine may then determine how the prediction may include such a graphic. Additionally, the engine may determine that one or more characters or symbols may be mapped to a graphic. For instance, the sequence “:-)” may be mapped by the system to a single “smiley face.” This is similar to how approximate typing methods map a sequence of characters to another such sequence, only in this case the resulting sequence includes a graphic object.

7.8 Spell Mode Automatic Tracking

The primary objective of “spell mode” is to enable specification of the dual signature of the sequence typed by the user. Typically while we are in spell mode, we use the “cycle” key (or scroll/up-down mechanism) to go through the dual signatures for each character (or other object) entered. It is also possible to enter normal signatures in the spell mode through ORK typing. The typing prediction in the spell mode may be different than that in the normal prediction mode and in fact may be completely deterministic for a key. However, a user may choose to not use this typing and may enter normal signatures only in the normal prediction mode.

In the process of entry of the normal signature, if the user finds that the dual signature of the sequence needs to be specified, and thus the user moves into spell mode, we may provide an additional feature that we call “automatic tracking.” This feature comes into play when the user enters and also exits the spell mode. At time of entry the system specifically re-places the cursor such that it operates on the first character of the sequence being typed, while at the time of exit it re-places the cursor such that it goes back to the original position where the spell mode was entered or a position that is at the end of the sequence (including before or after a delimiter). In general, the exact placement of the cursor in both cases may vary and may be determined by several factors at run-time.

Note that for the above feature the user may attempt to spell a sequence on a “word” basis, or on possibly another basis that may be longer, such as full sentences/paragraphs/pages/etc., and the corresponding location of the cursor to be placed at may vary. Also, note that the feature may be provided to the user as a set of customizable options, including ones that may enable or disable the whole feature of re-placement of cursor entirely.

7.9 Numeric and Symbol Mode Mapping

A particular way for mapping of numerals and some symbols is described here and may be used.

The user may enter a numeric mode through an input signal that may be a key press. In this mode, pressing any one of the main ten keyboard keys will lead to the system generating as output a corresponding numeral (from 0-9, exact assignment may vary such as 1234567890).

Further, when in the numeric mode, another input (including a key down event of Shift or other Key) may cause the mode to change to a symbol mode in which each of the ten keys may correspond to a specific symbol being output. In particular, the correspondence to the key arrangement from left to right may be as follows: @ $ + − / ( ) , . : .

Further, when in symbol mode (and the Shift key may be continued to be held down), the user may produce one or more inputs (including an up/down/cycle key events) that cause the mapping of the keys to symbols to change to a different set of symbols. In particular, the following two mapping are of interest and may be arrived to by consecutive presses of say a cycle key: # % * = { } < > ; and “ & ^_ | [ ] ! ' ?. Another input from the user (including release of the Shift or other key previously held down) may then cause the mode to revert from symbol to numeric.

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APPENDIX A STANDARD TAG SETS

A.1 Part-of-Speech Tags Used

These are standard tags used for instance by the British National Corpus (BNC).

-   AJ0 adjective (general or positive) e.g. good, old -   AJC comparative adjective e.g. better, older -   AJS superlative adjective, e.g. best, oldest -   AT0 article, e.g. the, a, an, no -   AV0 adverb (general, not sub-classified as AVP or AVQ), e.g. often,     well, longer, furthest. Note that adverbs, unlike adjectives, are     not tagged as positive, comparative, or superlative. This is because     of the relative rarity of comparative or superlative forms. -   AVP adverb particle, e.g. up, off, out. This tag is used for all     prepositional adverbs, whether or not they are used idiomatically in     phrasal verbs such as Come out here, or I can't hold out any longer. -   AVQ wh-adverb, e.g. when, how, why. The same tag is used whether the     word is used interrogatively or to introduce a relative clause. -   CJC coordinating conjunction, e.g. and, or, but. -   CJS subordinating conjunction, e.g. although, when. -   CJT the subordinating conjunction that, when introducing a relative     clause, as in the day that follows Christmas. Some theories treat     that here as a relative pronoun; others as a conjunction. We have     adopted the latter analysis. -   CRD cardinal numeral, e.g. one, 3, fifty-five, 6609. -   DPS possessive determiner form, e.g. your, their, his. -   DT0 general determiner: a determiner which is not a DTQ e.g. this     both in This is my house and This house is mine. A determiner is     defined as a word which typically occurs either as the first word in     a noun phrase, or as the head of a noun phrase. -   DTQ wh-determiner, e.g. which, what, whose, which. The same tag is     used whether the word is used interrogatively or to introduce a     relative clause. -   EX0 existential there, the word there appearing in the constructions     there is . . . , there are . . . . -   ITJ interjection or other isolate, e.g. oh, yes, mhm, wow. -   NN0 common noun, neutral for number, e.g. aircraft, data, committee.     Singular collective nouns such as committee take this tag on the     grounds that they can be followed by either a singular or a plural     verb. -   NN1 singular common noun, e.g. pencil, goose, time, revelation. -   NN2 plural common noun, e.g. pencils, geese, times, revelations. -   NP0 proper noun, e.g. London, Michael, Mars, IBM. Note that no     distinction is made for number in the case of proper nouns, since     plural proper names are a comparative rarity. -   ORD ordinal numeral, e.g. first, sixth, 77th, next, last. No     distinction is made between ordinals used in nominal and adverbial     roles. next and last are included in this category, as general     ordinals. -   PNI indefinite pronoun, e.g. none, everything, one (pronoun),     nobody. This tag is applied to words which always function as heads     of noun phrases. Words like some and these, which can also occur     before a noun head in an article-like function, are tagged as     determiners, DT0 or AT0. -   PNP personal pronoun, e.g. I, you, them, ours. Note that possessive     pronouns such as ours and theirs are included in this category. -   PNQ wh-pronoun, e.g. who, whoever, whom. The same tag is used     whether the word is used interrogatively or to introduce a relative     clause. -   PNX reflexive pronoun, e.g. myself, yourself, itself, ourselves. -   POS the possessive or genitive marker 's or '. Note that this marker     is tagged as a distinct word. For example, Peter's or someone else's     is tagged <NP0>Peter<POS>'s <CJC> or <PNI> someone <AV0>     else<POS>'s]]; -   PRF the preposition of. This word has a special tag of its own,     because of its high frequency and its almost exclusively postnominal     function. -   PRP preposition, other than of, e.g. about, at, in, on behalf of,     with. Note that prepositional phrases like on behalf of or in spite     of are treated as single words. -   TO0 the infinitive marker to. -   UNC unclassified items which are not appropriately classified as     items of the English lexicon. Examples include foreign (non-English)     words; special typographical symbols; formulae; hesitation fillers     such as errm in spoken language. -   VBB the present tense forms of the verb be, except for is or 's am,     are 'm, 're, be (subjunctive or imperative), ai (as in ain't). -   VBD the past tense forms of the verb be, was, were. -   VBG -ing form of the verb be, being. -   VBI the infinitive form of the verb be, be. -   VBN the past participle form of the verb be, been -   VBZ the -s form of the verb be, is, 's. -   VDB the finite base form of the verb do, do. -   VDD the past tense form of the verb do, did. -   VDG the -ing form of the verb do, doing. -   VDI the infinitive form of the verb do, do. -   VDN the past participle form of the verb do, done. -   VDZ the -s form of the verb do, does. -   VHB the finite base form of the verb have, have, 've. -   VHD the past tense form of the verb have, had, 'd. -   VHG the -ing form of the verb have, having. -   VHI the infinitive form of the verb have, have. -   VHN the past participle form of the verb have, had. -   VHZ the -s form of the verb have, has, 's. -   VM0 modal auxiliary verb, e.g. can, could, will, 'll, 'd, wo (as in     won't) -   VVB the finite base form of lexical verbs, e.g. forget, send, live,     return. This tag is used for imperatives and the present subjunctive     forms, but not for the infinitive (VVI). -   VVD the past tense form of lexical verbs, e.g. forgot, sent, lived,     returned. -   VVG the -ing form of lexical verbs, e.g. forgetting, sending,     living, returning. -   VVI the infinitive form of lexical verbs, e.g. forget, send, live,     return. -   VVN the past participle form of lexical verbs, e.g. forgotten, sent,     lived, returned. -   VVZ the -s form of lexical verbs, e.g. forgets, sends, lives,     returns. -   XX0 the negative particle not or n't. -   ZZ0 alphabetical symbols, e.g. A, a, B, b, c, d.

The following tags are used to indicate where the CLAWS system (the tagging system used by the BNC) has indicated an uncertainty between two possible analyses:

-   AJ0-AV0 adjective or adverb -   AJ0-NN1 adjective or singular common noun -   AJ0-VVD adjective or past tense verb -   AJ0-VVG adjective or -ing form of the verb -   AJ0-VVN adjective or past participle -   AVP-PRP adverb particle or preposition -   AVQ-CJS wh-adverb or subordinating conjunction -   CJS-PRP subordinating conjunction or preposition -   CJT-DT0 that as conjunction or determiner -   CRD-PNI one as number or pronoun -   NN1-NP0 singular common noun or proper noun -   NN1-VVB singular common noun or base verb form -   NN1-VVG singular common noun or -ing form of the verb -   NN2-VVZ plural noun or -s form of lexical verb -   VVD-VVN past tense verb or past participle

The following codes are used with c elements only:

-   PUL left bracket (i.e. ( or [) -   PUN any mark of separation (. !, : ; - ? . . . ) -   PUQ quotation mark (‘ ’ “ ”) -   PUR right bracket (i.e.) or ]) -   Note that some punctuation marks (notably long dashes and ellipses)     are not tagged as such in the corpus, but appear simply as entity     references.

APPENDIX B POS TAGS AND COLLISION GROUPS

B.1 Top Ten Collision Groups with Conditional Probabilities

TABLE 18 Top collision groups with frequencies and conditional probabilities. (x. denotes an approximation of x to at least three decimals.) # Words Tag Frequency P(.|signature, tag) 1 of total 2941790 0.888 prf 2941444 1. prp 276 1. unc 28 0.373 av0 27 1. cjc 11 0. cjs 3 1. vhi 1 1. or total 370855 0.112 cjc 370808 1. unc 47 0.627 2 they total 433475 0.729 pnp 433441 1. unc 34 1. then total 160826 0.271 av0 160652 1. cjs 171 1. aj0-av0 1 1. aj0 1 1. cjc 1 1. 3 now total 137814 0.575 av0 137801 1. cjs 11 1. nn1 1 0.027 unc 1 0.125 how total 101517 0.424 avq 101508 1. unc 4 0.500 nn1 3 0.081 av0 1 0. np0 1 0.009 nos total 186 0.001 np0 107 0.939 nn2 79 0.975 yow total 84 0. nn1 33 0.892 nn1-vvb 26 1. nn1-np0 15 1. vvb 6 1. np0 3 0.026 vvi 1 1. hos total 8 0. np0 3 0.026 unc 3 0.375 nn2 2 0.025 4 to total 2560346 0.966 to0 1620850 1. prp 917579 1. avp-prp 15488 1. avp 6245 1. unc 182 0.363 av0 1 1. pnp 1 1. go total 90542 0.034 vvi 59772 1. vvb 28605 1. nn1 1462 1. nn1-vvb 381 1. unc 320 0.637 np0 2 1. 5 just total 129550 0.641 av0 125465 1. aj0-av0 3305 1. aj0 777 1. unc 3 1. must total 72571 0.359 vm0 72059 1. nn1 512 1. 6 way total 96280 0.575 nn1 95313 0.995 np0 844 0.996 av0 122 0.976 unc 1 0.018 say total 68535 0.409 vvi 41291 0.975 vvb 26109 0.944 nn1-vvb 673 1. nn1 436 0.005 unc 20 0.364 av0 3 0.024 np0 3 0.004 wan total 2770 0.017 vvb 1554 0.056 vvi 1043 0.025 aj0 139 1. unc 34 0.618 7 on total 724197 0.914 prp 647344 1. avp 49967 1. avp-prp 26791 1. unc 84 0.977 av0 9 1. aj0 1 1. np0 1 0.043 oh total 68437 0.086 itj 68413 1. np0 22 0.957 unc 2 0.023 8 may total 128513 0.671 vm0 113024 1. np0 15242 0.893 nn1 231 0.004 unc 16 0.390 man total 62098 0.324 nn1 58769 0.996 nn1-np0 1669 0.740 np0 1544 0.090 nn1-vvb 71 0.772 unc 25 0.610 vvb 12 0.308 vvi 8 0.800 jay total 940 0.005 nn1-np0 587 0.260 np0 275 0.016 nn1 27 0. vvb 27 0.692 nn1-vvb 21 0.228 vvi 2 0.200 nn0 1 1. 9 can total 236321 0.791 vm0 234386 1. nn1 1019 0.017 vvb 734 1. nn1-vvb 153 0.987 unc 13 0.722 vvi 9 1. aj0-nn1 3 1. aj0 2 1. np0 2 0.001 day total 62256 0.208 nn1 58863 0.983 np0 1812 0.998 nn1-np0 1576 0.988 unc 5 0.278 cay total 34 0. nn1-np0 19 0.012 nn1 11 0. nn1-vvb 2 0.013 np0 2 0.001 10 new total 125206 0.672 aj0 114655 1. np0 10544 0.996 unc 7 0.500 yes total 60612 0.326 itj 60592 1. nn2 14 0.609 unc 6 0.429 yew total 269 0.001 nn1 171 0.868 nn1-np0 34 0.739 nn1-vvb 32 0.821 np0 27 0.003 vvb 4 0.800 vvi 1 0.143 hes total 38 0. nn2-vvz 15 1. nn2 9 0.391 vvz 7 1. np0 6 0.001 unc 1 0.071 hex total 31 0. nn1 19 0.096 nn1-np0 5 0.109 np0 4 0. nn1-vvb 3 0.077 hew total 28 0. nn1-np0 7 0.152 nn1 7 0.036 vvi 6 0.857 nn1-vvb 4 0.103 np0 3 0. vvb 1 0.200 B.2 The Accuracy of Using Tags to Predict Dual Signatures

In Subsection 3.3 we argued that if we know the signature and the tag of an intended word, then we may pinpoint the word and, equivalently, the dual signature with good accuracy. In this subsection we shall investigate this a little more closely.

To be specific, let us assume that we use the maximum likelihood estimator ŵ to select the word, given the tag κ and the signature σ: ŵ=ŵ(σ,κ)= argmax_(w)Prob(w|σ,κ).  (190) We now want to find out, on the average, how often will this maximum likelihood estimator coincide with the intended word. In other words, what is the probability that the intended word w equals ŵ?

Here is how we can calculate this. Let us pick a corpora that we believe reflects the usage of the words that we are interested in. Let us also assume that this corpora is correctly tagged and the tags come with the corresponding frequencies (of occurrence).

$\begin{matrix} {\begin{matrix} {{{Prob}\left( {w \neq \hat{w}} \right)} = {\sum\limits_{\sigma}{\sum\limits_{\kappa}{{Prob}\left( {w \neq {{\hat{w}\left( {\sigma,\kappa} \right)}{{{sign}(w)}}}} \right.}}}} \\ {\left. {{= \sigma},{{{tag}(w)} = \kappa}} \right){{Prob}\left( {{{{sign}(w)} = \sigma},{{{tag}(w)} = \kappa}} \right)}} \\ {\approx {\frac{1}{F}{\sum\limits_{\sigma}{\sum\limits_{\kappa}{\sum\limits_{{{{sign}{(w)}} = \sigma},{{{tag}{(w)}} = \kappa}}^{\prime}\;{{f(w)}.}}}}}} \end{matrix}{{{Here}\mspace{14mu} F} = {\sum\limits_{\sigma}{\sum\limits_{\kappa}{\sum\limits_{{{{sign}{(w)}} = \sigma},{{{tag}{(w)}} = \kappa}}^{\;}{f(w)}}}}}} & (191) \end{matrix}$ is the total frequencies of all words w in the corpora, and

$\sum\limits_{{{{sign}{(w)}} = \sigma},{{{tag}{(w)}} = \kappa}}^{\prime}{f(w)}$ denotes the sum of all the word frequencies f(w)=f(w, σ, κ) corresponding to a fixed signature σ and tag κ except the highest frequency in each tag group. Now, if we let {circumflex over (f)}(σ, κ) denote the highest frequency of a word, given a specific signature σ and specific tag κ, then we have

${{\sum\limits_{{{{sign}{(w)}} = \sigma},{{{tag}{(w)}} = \kappa}}^{\prime}{f(w)}} = {{\sum\limits_{{{{sign}{(w)}} = \sigma},{{{tag}{(w)}} = \kappa}}^{\;}{f(w)}} - {\hat{f}\left( {\sigma,\kappa} \right)}}},{and},{hence},{{\sum\limits_{\sigma}{\sum\limits_{\kappa}{\sum\limits_{{{{sign}{(w)}} = \sigma},{{{tag}{(w)}} = \kappa}}^{\prime}{f(w)}}}} = {F - {\sum\limits_{\sigma}{\sum\limits_{\kappa}{{\hat{f}\left( {\sigma,\kappa} \right)}.}}}}}$ With this, we may rewrite the formula (191) as

$\begin{matrix} {{{Prob}\left( {w \neq \hat{w}} \right)} \approx {1 - {\frac{1}{F}{\sum\limits_{\sigma}{\sum\limits_{\kappa}{{\hat{f}\left( {\sigma,\kappa} \right)}.}}}}}} & (192) \end{matrix}$

Now, with this equation we can calculate the probability Prob(w≠ŵ) once we are given a tagged corpus with frequency information.

EXAMPLE B.1

Suppose we take the full Corpus 1. Then the total word count F=90,198,465, the sum of all the non-collision word frequencies ncF=51,571,283, and the sum cF of the largest frequencies for each POS in each collision group cF=38,079,825. With this we have

$\begin{matrix} {{{{F - \left( {{ncF} + {cF}} \right)} = 547},357.}{{Hence},}} & (193) \\ \begin{matrix} {{{Prob}\left( {w \neq \hat{w}} \right)} = {1 - \frac{{ncF} + {cF}}{F}}} \\ {= {1 - 0.9939316}} \\ {= {0.0060684.}} \end{matrix} & (194) \end{matrix}$ In other words, the maximum likelihood estimator is accurate 99.4% of the time (on the average). 

1. A computer system for data entry to an electronic device, comprising: a reduced keyboard with at least one row of keys, wherein each key of said one row of keys has a correspondence with a plurality of data characters, and said reduced keyboard associates one or more user input actions with selection of a specific key; a disambiguation unit in communication with said reduced keyboard, said disambiguation unit comprising a processor, a long-term memory unit, and a short-term memory unit, said processor operable to (a) apply approximate typing rules to translate user key selection from said reduced keyboard into valid data character combinations of said electronic device, said approximate typing rules accounting for uncertainty that a selected key is an intended key, (b) apply disambiguation to selection of a most similar character sequence, and (c) transmit said valid data character combinations to said electronic device; and an output device in communication with said disambiguation unit, said output device providing a user with feedback regarding data character combinations transmitted by said disambiguation unit.
 2. A computer system as in claim 1, wherein said user input actions comprise depressing one or more keys with one or more fingers.
 3. A computer system as in claim 2, wherein said one or more fingers consist of two thumbs.
 4. A computer system as in claim 1, wherein said user input actions are directed through a pointing device.
 5. A computer system as in claim 4, wherein said pointing device is controlled through a dial control.
 6. A computer system as in claim 1, wherein said reduced keyboard comprises a physical keyboard.
 7. A computer system as in claim 1, wherein said correspondence maintains a left-to-right data character ordering consistent with a QWERTY keyboard configuration.
 8. A computer system as in claim 1, wherein said output device comprises an electronic display.
 9. A computer system as in claim 1, wherein said reduced keyboard comprises a virtual keyboard displayed on said output device and said user input actions are directed through a touch display.
 10. A computer system as in claim 1, wherein said output device comprises an audio feedback device.
 11. A computer system as in claim 1, further comprising a main unit coupled with said reduced keyboard, disambiguation unit, and output device.
 12. A computer system as in claim 11, wherein said reduced keyboard is detachable from said main unit.
 13. A computer system as in claim 11, wherein said main unit further comprises said electronic device. 